Theories of Hypnosis Current Models and Perspectives

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 1991-10-04
Publisher(s): The Guilford Press
List Price: $114.08

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Summary

It has been said that "hypnosis is a collection of techniques in need of a unifying theory." (James A. Hall, Hypnosis: A Jungian Perspective). While the varied substrates of these techniques preclude the formation of any one theory of hypnosis, this volume presents a "state-of-the-science" view of existing theories of hypnosis. Written by eminent scholars and researchers, this uniquely authoritative resource also provides a wealth of information about the history of hypnosis, clinical and research perspectives on hypnosis, and the strengths and weaknesses of empirical methods used to address crucial theoretical questions.

The streamlined organization of the volume facilitates the reader's ability to contrast and compare research findings and concepts across theories. In the introductory chapters, the editors describe hypnosis paradigms and schools of thought, including major points of convergence and divergence, as well as a broad vista of different perspectives on the history of hypnosis. The theoretical chapters that follow present definitive statements by an international array of eminent scholars who are at the forefront of conceptual advances in the realms of clinical and experimental hypnosis. Their contributions, written in lively first-person narratives, explore current thinking about hypnosis and represent important clinical and research traditions that extend beyond the territory of hypnosis to mainstream psychology.

Providing a thorough discussion of hypnotic phenomena, the book tackles tough questions such as whether hypnosis evokes an altered state of consciousness; whether hypnotic behavior is involuntary; whether hypnotizability is stable, trait-like, and modifiable; and whether hypnotic and non-hypnotic behavior can be distinguished in meaningful ways. The diversity of viewpoints, including competitive ones, illuminates the debates which have expanded the frontiers of knowledge about hypnosis. In the concluding section, the editors compare and contrast these theories, discuss pertinent research issues, and lay out an agenda for future research.

Given its stellar list of contributors and the unique niche it occupies as the first authoritative survey of its kind, THEORIES OF HYPNOSIS is of value to anyone interested in the topic. The editors' ten years of experience teaching hypnosis to psychology and medical students has resulted in a book with enormous appeal to students and instructors, as well as clinicians and researchers. A wide variety of professionals--academics, clinical psychologists, psychiatrists, social workers, dentists--will find it an authoritative introduction and invaluable reference to this still-growing, ever-fascinating field.

Author Biography

Steven Jay Lynn, Ph.D., is Professor of Psychology at Ohio University and has a private practice. He is a former president of the American Psychological Association's Division of Psychological Hypnosis; a fellow in the American Psychological Association, the American Psychological Society, the Association for Applied and Preventative Psychology, and the Society for Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis; and a diplomate and member of the executive committee of the American Board of Psychological Hypnosis. In 1991, the Society for Clinical Hypnosis honored Theories of Hypnosis (co-edited with Judith W. Rhue) as best hypnosis book of the year. Dr. Lynn is an advisory editor of the Journal of Abnormal Psychology, the International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, and the American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis, and a North American editor of Contemporary Hypnosis. He has written or edited textbooks on abnormal psychology, hypnosis, and psychotherapy and has published more than 120 articles

Table of Contents

I. HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES 1. Early Theories of Hypnosis: A Clinical Perspective,Melvin A. Gravitz. 2. History and Historigraphy of Hypnosis,Nicholas P. Spanos & John F. Chaves. II. SINGLE-FACTOR THEMES The Neodissociation Perspective 3. A Neodissociation Interpretation of Hypnosis,Ernest R.Hilgard. 4. A Neodissociative Critique of Spanos's Social-Psychological Model of Hypnosis,Kenneth S. Bowers & Thomas M. Davidson. 5. Hypnotizability: Individual Differences in Dissociation and the Flexible Control of Psychological Processes,Frederick J. Evans. Hypnosis as Psychological Regression 6. Hypnosis as a Special Case of Psychological Regression,Michael R. Nash. Hypnosis as Relaxation 7. Anesis,William E. Edmonston, Jr. III. CLINICAL PERSPECTIVES 8. The Locksmith Model: Accessing Hypnotic Responsiveness,Joseph Barber. 9. Ericksonian Hypnotherapy: A Communications Approach to Hypnosis,Jeffrey K. Zeig & Peter J. Rennick. IV. THE SOCIAL-COGNITIVE PERSPECTIVE 10. Role Theory: Hypnosis from a Dramaturgical and Narrational Perspective,William C. Coe & Theodore R. Sarbin. 11. A Social-Cognitive Approach to Hypnosis,Nicholas P. Spanos. 12. Compliance, Belief, and Semantics in Hypnosis: A Nonstate, Social-Cognitive Perspective,Graham F. Wagstaff. 13. An Integrative Model of Hypnosis,Steven Jay Lynn & Judith W. Rhue. 14. The Social Learning Theory of Hypnosis,Irving Kirsch. 15. The Ecosystemic Approach to Hypnosis,David P. Fourie. V. INTERACTIVE-PHENOMENOLOGICAL MODELS 16. Two Disciplines of Scientific Hypnosis: A Synergistic Model,Robert Nadon, Jean-Roch Laurence, and Campbell W. Perry. 17. Hypnosis, Context, and Commitment,Peter W. Sheehan. 18. The Construction and Resolution of Experience and Behavior in Hypnosis,Kevin M. McConkey. 19. Toward a Social-Psychobiological Model of Hypnosis,Eva I.Banyai. VI. CONCLUSIONS 20. Hypnosis Theories: Themes, Variations, and Research Directions,Steven Jay Lynn & Judith W. Rhue.

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