Selling over 25,000 copies across three editions, this book provides an unrivalled introduction to the core concepts and basic techniques of Transactional Analysis (TA). Ian Stewart guides the reader step-by-step through the successive stages in using TA to create therapeutic change, building understanding of the way the approach works in real-life practice.
Key features of this new edition
-a single extended case study running through the book
-′Key ideas′ panels to summarize the main ideas in each section
-Detailed discussion of ′closing the escape hatches′: TA′s distinctive approach to resolving the issues of suicide, self-harm or violence
-Practice Checklists offering suggested questions readers can use to appraise their own work with clients at strategic points in the text
- Space for Reflection sections and Further Reading lists to conclude each chapter.
This bestselling textbook offers trainee and practising psychotherapists and counsellors a concise, hands-on exploration of current concepts and techniques in Transactional Analysis.
Ian Stewart is Co-Director of The Berne Institute, Nottingham. He is the author of Eric Berne (SAGE, 1992) and Developing Transactional Analysis Counselling (SAGE, 1996), and co-author of TA Today (2nd edn, Lifespace, 2012).
Ian Stewart is the Co-Director of the Berne Institute, has been a practising Transactional Analysis psychotherapist for over 30 years, and has presented Transactional Analysis trainings worldwide.
I picked this book up hoping to get an in depth look at the structure and theory behind transactional analysis, but this book looks more at the practice of TA. It starts with the initial session and goes through all the way to termination.
While it wasn't the book I was looking for, I enjoyed being able to see the similarities in TA and other theories (some similarities to solution focused and reality therapy--perhaps TA was Berne's way of making psychoanalysis more short term?).
If you are thinking that TA might be your theory of choice, this would be a great book to pick up. But if you are looking to understand the ego stages and games of TA...this isn't it.
Although his was of doing it seems a bit mechanical and robotic, the books does a great job of presenting most of TA concepts and basic theory in a very accessible and clear way. I'm most impressed with his presentation of impasse theory (which seemed very complicated and unclear before). A useful read.
For practitioners, probably not a great role model. I feel like it lacks the human element, though I'm not sure why and how I got this feeling. Probably the exact reciting of certain words (like for contracting or closing escape hutches) as if they were "magical". Also the obsessive focus on contracting every single element of a conversation, which gets annoying really fast. Everything turned around at the end when he elaborately explains that even after re-decision (the most complex, in-depth therapy-work one can do), all of the progress can easily go down the drain because "in Child, the person still has many motivations to go back to the familiar strategies" and because the people in the client's life don't change so they will invite them back to "scripty" behaviors. So, is it all a matter of having a "strong will"?!? Not a good look.