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An
invitation to subscribe to the original professional journal of
Gestalt therapy
now
in its 33nd year of publication
|
|
available
in both a traditional printed edition -$50 yearly
and in a low
cost digital CD version (an exact reproduction of the printed
edition) - $30 yearly
both subscriptions include worldwide first
class/air mail delivery
A
Special Offer
Four Free Downloads of Historical Gestalt
Materials
From the Gestalt Journal Press Archives &
Collections
For a limited time, visit the IGJ "Guest Visitors' Page" and download free five historical Gestalt documents without subscribing and see a complete list of the materials currently available to paid subscribers
Once you visit the visitors' page and download your free materials, we hope you will subscribe to this important two-issue volume with contributions from Gestalt practitioners and theoreticians throughout the world
The
year will include two special issues.
The first, which
explores the role and conception of the “self” in
theoretical development of Gestalt therapy, is about to arrive from
the printer. Included is an edited transcription of "The
Self in Gestalt Therapy," a two-hour conference
dialogue/presentation by Gary Yontef and Erv Polster with additional
participation by audience members Norman Friedman, Bertram
Müller, Michael Vincent Miller, Violet
Oaklander, Margherita Spagnuolo Lobb, Randy Burnham, Perry
Klepner, Janice Gerard, Bob Scarborough, Malcolm Parlett and Lee
Geltman. Bruce Kenofer's contribution explores the "The
Contradictions Within Perls’ Sense of Self, " and "The
Myth of We," a chapter from Michael Vincent Miller's new book,
Teaching a Paranoid to
Flirt: The Poetics of Gestalt Therapy, looks
into the self in relation to the other. The original, unedited
recording of the Polster/Yontef dialogue is available to subscribers
only for download from the "Subscriber
The thinking and training of Isadore From, the "philosopher" of the founders of the Gestalt therapy, will form the basis for the fall issue of the Journal. From was part of the "Group of Seven" intellectuals who, in 1952, founded the first Gestalt Institute in the world. From's writings were limited, and this issue will be comprised of articles written by his students. Rather than exploring what From taught them, they will discuss how training with him directly affected their personal approach to clinical practice and how he contributed to their theoretical thinking.
Visit the International Gestalt Journal's GUEST page to see the complete index of materials available only to subscribers. Be sure to look for your five FREE downloads of historical Gestalt documents.
While you are there, enter your subscription to Volume 33 of the International Gestalt Journal and gain unlimited access to the wealth of online materials available only to subscribers.
VISIT THE IGJ GUEST PAGE TO GET YOUR FREE DOWNLOADS