Routledge Mental Health

Feeling Queer or Queer Feelings?: Radical Approaches to Counselling Sex, Sexualities and Genders

cover of Feeling Queer or Queer Feelings?

Edited by Lyndsey Moon

  • List Price: $100.00
  • Web Price: $90.00 (You save $10.00)
  • ISBN: 978-0-415-38520-6
  • Published by: Routledge
  • Publication Date: 11/08/2007
  • Pages: 168
  • Binding(s): Hardback | Paperback

About the Book

Feeling Queer or Queer Feelings? presents highly innovative and contemporary ideas for counsellors, counselling and clinical psychologists and psychotherapists to consider in their work with non-heterosexual clients.

Ground-breaking ideas are presented by new thinkers in the area for issues such as:

  • coming out
  • transgender desire
  • theoretical modalities in working with HIV
  • the role of therapy in bondage and discipline, domination and submission, and sadomasochism
  • the use of queer theory in therapeutic research.

Feeling Queer or Queer Feelings? will challenge present ideas about sex, gender and sexuality, and will prove to be invaluable for clinicians in this field.

Customers who bought Feeling Queer or Queer Feelings? also bought:

Eleven Blunders that Cripple Psychotherapy in America

Eleven Blunders that Cripple Psychotherapy in America

Nicholas A Cummings, William T O'Donohue

Published 4/24/2008

After a period of economic success and high regard in society, clinical psychology has fallen onto hard times, assert authors Nicholas Cummings and William O’Donohue. In the...

(more)

The Integral Intake

The Integral Intake

Andre Marquis

Published 12/20/2007

Using formal assessment instruments in counseling and psychotherapy is an efficient and systematic way to obtain information about clients and to subsequently tailor a counseling...

(more)

Psychodrama, Surplus Reality and the Art of Healing

Psychodrama, Surplus Reality and the Art of Healing

Zerka T Moreno, Leif Dag Blomkvist, Thomas Rutzel

Published 3/16/2000

The practice of psychodrama allows participants to create a world for themselves, free of usual rules and constraints. This freedom from all ordinary conventions is...

(more)