1978
DOI: 10.1080/00207284.1978.11491603
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The Working Alliance in Analytic Group Psychotherapy

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Cited by 20 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…The id wish to suffer flourishes here. The unconscious superego is a willing partner, illustrating what Glatzer (1969Glatzer ( , 1978) has referred to and described as the "corruptible superego." Hal can be upset about this man's suffering and blame himself for his part in this, all the while obscuring from himself the real problem, that is, that masochism does not die easily, and at this point a fair compromise is its being confined to a dream.…”
Section: Example 6--straight From the Hip Dreammentioning
confidence: 93%
“…The id wish to suffer flourishes here. The unconscious superego is a willing partner, illustrating what Glatzer (1969Glatzer ( , 1978) has referred to and described as the "corruptible superego." Hal can be upset about this man's suffering and blame himself for his part in this, all the while obscuring from himself the real problem, that is, that masochism does not die easily, and at this point a fair compromise is its being confined to a dream.…”
Section: Example 6--straight From the Hip Dreammentioning
confidence: 93%
“…The first sounds very similar to the idea of socioemotional or attachments from cohesion, and "we-ness" is a word commonly used to describe cohesion. Glatzer (1978) divides alliance into membermember alliance (horizontal cohesion) and member-leader alliance (vertical cohesion).…”
Section: Alliancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…As has been noted {Durkin, 1964; Foulkes, 1957;Glatzer, 1978;Scheidlinger, 1968}, the group, while communicating on an ego level, possesses qualities that stimulate a regression in the service of the ego {Hartman, 1958} and elicit charged transference affects. Although most people can allow themselves to project their transferences, others manifest a resistance to transference regression.…”
Section: Fear Of Regressionmentioning
confidence: 99%