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"Tiger! tiger! burning bright"

aesthetic values as clinical values in Gestalt therapy

Daniel J. Bloom

pp. 63-77

Abstract

The aesthetic is central to Gestalt therapy.Its particular organization of sensation includes - without being limited to - the experience of beauty itself. This same aesthetic attitude that creates art and appreciates beauty accounts for life's harmonies and rhythms. Aesthetic qualities animate the lifework of an artist as well as the quotidian events of ordinary life. The theory and practice of Gestalt therapy is infused with these qualities. It is no accident that the first and most comprehensive elaboration of Gestalt therapy theory was written by Paul Goodman, whose efforts in creative literature (fiction and poetry) were as ambitious as his works in psychology and social theory. His collaboration with Frederick Perls is the coming together of European psychoanalysis, phenomenology, Gestalt psychology, and existentialism with the American pragmatism of William James, George Herbert Mead, and John Dewey (Richard Kitzler, "Three Lectures", article in preparation).

Publication details

Published in:

Spagnuolo Lobb Margherita, Amendt-Lyon Nancy (2003) Creative license: the art of Gestalt therapy. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 63-77

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-7091-6023-7_6

Full citation:

Bloom Daniel J. (2003) „"Tiger! tiger! burning bright": aesthetic values as clinical values in Gestalt therapy“, In: M. Spagnuolo Lobb & N. Amendt-Lyon (eds.), Creative license, Dordrecht, Springer, 63–77.