Comment
This is an ambitious and courageous book … Though the starting point of the book is two brief interactions between two individuals, its scope is as broad as humanity. The book itself is a case study of intellectual honesty and racial sensitivity. It is the most important discussion of race, culture and ethnicity in the context of person-centred therapy ever written.
Tony Merry, University of East London
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Contents
PART 1. REVIEW OF ‘THE RIGHT TO BE DESPERATE’ AND ‘ON ANGER AND HURT’
1. Summary of ‘The Right to be Desperate’ Christine Clarke and Michael Goldman
2. Summary of ‘On Anger and Hurt’ Debora C. Brink and Debra Rosenzweig
3. Looking Back ‘On Anger and Hurt’ Roy Moodley
PART 2 ANALYSIS AND CLINICAL REFLECTIONS OF THE THERAPY
4a. Uncharacteristic Directiveness: Rogers and the ‘On Anger and Hurt’ Client Barbara Temaner Brodley
4b. 2004 Postscript to ‘Uncharacteristic Directiveness’ Barbara Temaner Brodley
5. Carl Rogers’ Verbal Responses in ‘On Anger and Hurt’: Content Analysis and Clinical Reflections Germain Lietaer
6. Rogerian Empathic Listening: Applying Conversation Analysis to ‘The Right to be Desperate’ Session Catrin S. Rhys, W. R. Selwyn Black and Shauna Savage
PART 3 RACE AND CULTURE IN PERSON-CENTRED COUNSELLING
7. Considerations of Race and Culture in the Practice of Non-Directive Client-Centered Therapy Sharon Mier and Marge Witty
8. ‘The Right to be Desperate’ and ‘On Anger and Hurt’ in the Presence of Carl Rogers Roy Moodley, Geraldine Shipton and Graham Falken
9. Double-Edged Sword: Power and Person-Centred Counselling Khatidja Chantler
10. The Person-Centred Challenge: Cultural Difference and the Core Conditions Christine Clarke
11. Cross-Racial/Cultural Matching: Three Approaches to Working Transculturally Shukla Dhingra and Richard Saxton
12. Growing Race Awareness in the Therapist Colin Lago and Jean Clark
13. Using the Videotapes of the Sessions to Examine Ways of Helping Counsellors to Work with the Person-Centred Approach in a Transcultural Setting Mary Charleton and Melanie Lockett
PART 4 VIEWS FROM OTHER PERSPECTIVES
14. ‘On Anger and Hurt’ Sessions: A Narrative Social Constructionist Perspective John McLeod
15. Points of Departure: A Humanistic-Spiritual View William West
16. Horizons of Alienation: Culture and Hermeneutics Susan James and Gary Foster
17. Therapist’s Faces, Client’s Masks: Racial Enactments through Pain, Anger and Hurt Anissa Talahite and Roy Moodley
PART 5 PERSONAL REFLECTIONS AND INTERPRETATIONS
18. Twenty-First Century Reflections on ‘The Right to be Desperate’ and ‘On Anger and Hurt’ Courtland Lee
19. A Credit to One’s Self, One’s Race and One's Community William A. Hall
20. The ‘Armour-Plated Man’ in Cross-Racial Counselling Josna Pankhania
21. The Man He Has Become Stephen Whitehead
22. ‘Tripping’ in ‘The Right to be Desperate’ and ‘On Anger and Hurt’ Gella Richards
23. Multiple Interpretations: Stories, Lies and Videotapes Will Stillwell
PART 6 HISTORICAL DOCUMENTS
24. Interview with Carl Rogers on the Use of Self in Therapy Michele Baldwin
25. Carl Rogers on Multicultural Counselling: Excerpts from letters from Carl Rogers to Jean Clark, 1979–1983 Colin Lago