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Coline Covington

    Coline Covington es una psicoterapeuta con más de veinte años de experiencia dedicada a guiar a las personas hacia una profunda transformación personal. Partiendo de su formación en análisis junguiano, emplea un enfoque ecléctico que ofrece tanto perspicacia profunda como resultados pragmáticos. Su extensa labor con una clientela diversa, que incluye líderes, artistas y profesionales, está informada por su experiencia en consultoría y su trabajo con el cambio sistémico. Su pericia se ve respaldada por sus roles de liderazgo en importantes organizaciones psicoanalíticas británicas y su trayectoria como editora de una destacada revista analítica.

    Who's to Blame? Collective Guilt on Trial
    For Goodness Sake
    Everyday Evils
    Shrinking the News
    • Shrinking the News brings together the author's wide range of articles from her regular column in the online newspaper, The Week. The articles cover current events from October 2008 until December 2010, concluding with more recent articles from 2013. These articles form a fascinating psychoanalytic insight on crime, politics, the economy, sports and stardom, and the quirky, bizarre events and trends that make up our daily life. The widespread popularity of these articles is a testimony to the public's interest in a psychoanalytic view of the world around us and why people do the things they do.

      Shrinking the News
    • Everyday Evils

      A psychoanalytic view of evil and morality

      • 186 páginas
      • 7 horas de lectura

      Exploring the psychological underpinnings of ordinary individuals committing heinous acts, the book delves into various contexts, including Nazi concentration camps and modern-day atrocities. It offers fresh insights into the emergence of evil behaviors and examines the extreme denial mechanisms people employ to distance themselves from these actions. Through a psychoanalytic lens, it challenges readers to confront the unsettling reality of everyday evils and the complexities of human morality.

      Everyday Evils
    • In the midst of atrocities, there is the silent presence of the brave individuals who act and stand apart from the crowd, who risk their own lives by rescuing others or by voicing their dissent. The actions of these exceptional individuals raise questions as to why they were able to do what they did and why other people don't. But if we look closer at their histories, we discover that they may not be as exceptional as we think.Bravery takes different forms in different contexts. Such as the young male patient, a war hero, struggling to separate from his refugee parents. Or Bailey Thompson, the 17-year-old who rescued concert-goers under sniper fire in Las Vegas in 2017. Or the student protestors in Hong Kong marching to protect their future and beliefs. The compulsion to act bravely is largely ascribed to conscience, that is, being true to one's beliefs. Those who act bravely do not feel as if they have a choice, because not to act is experienced as a betrayal of self. As such, bravery is a fundamental assertion not only of the self but of a moral order necessary to sustain the self.The perfect book for these unprecedented times, as we all need to find our own inner resources to face whatever lies ahead.

      For Goodness Sake
    • Who's to Blame? Collective Guilt on Trial presents a psychoanalytic exploration of blame and collective guilt in the aftermath of large-scale atrocities that cause widespread trauma and victimization. It explores aspects of social and collective guilt and considers how both perpetrators and victims make sense of their experiences.

      Who's to Blame? Collective Guilt on Trial