ABOUT THE EDITORS AND CONTRIBUTORS -- INTRODUCTION /Nick Totton and Mary-Jayne Rust -- PART I: CONTEXTS -- PART II: OTHER-THAN-HUMAN AND MORE-THAN-HUMAN -- PART III: THE VIEW FROM POSTMODERNISM -- PART IV: WHAT TO DO—POSSIBLE FUTURES -- PART V: WHAT TO DO—INFLUENCING ATTITUDES -- PART VI: WHAT TO DO—CLINICAL PRACTICE -- REFERENCES -- INDEX.
Mary-Jayne Rust is an art therapist and Jungian analyst. Alongside her private practice she writes, lectures and facilitates workshops in the field of ecopsychology. In the 1980s she worked at the Women's Therapy Centre with women with eating problems; this led to a wider interest in the roots of consumerism, the connections between body and psyche, land, and soul. Two journeys to Ladakh in the early 1990s alerted her to the seriousness of the environmental crisis, and gave her a brief glimpse of an almost intact traditional culture. On return she joined the PCSR ecopsychology group. This group of ten therapists met monthly for five years, discussing theory and exploring the practice of ecopsychology. She grew up beside the sea and is wild about swimming. Now she lives and works beside ancient woodland in North London. Nick Totton is a therapist and trainer with nearly thirty years experience. Originally a Reichian body therapist, his approach has become broad based and open to the spontaneous and unexpected. Nick has an MA in Psychoanalytic Studies, and has worked with Process-Oriented Psychology and trained as a craniosacral therapist.
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