Adolescents in Crisis offers a psychoanalytic perspective on the difficulties that
can arise when young people renegotiate their relationship with the world and their
own bodies as they experience puberty.
This edited collection explores the tension adolescents often experience between
their wish to develop and grow up, alongside the concurrent urge to regress towards
a pre- pubescent way of relating to their own self and others. Covering the period
from pre- teen years to the dawn of adulthood, and including clinical vignettes
throughout, the contributors look at issues such as isolation, self- harm, eating disorders,
gender identity and delinquent behaviors. These are often used as defense
strategies against feelings of powerlessness and inadequacy that puberty can trigger.
Each chapter draws on traditional and contemporary psychoanalytic thought to
help the reader understand these anxieties and provide guidance on how the therapist,
parent and adolescent can work through them together, allowing the young
person to explore new ways of managing their anxieties.
Part of the 101 Kids books series, this book is an invaluable resource for psychoanalysts
and psychotherapists working with young people, as well as teachers,
social workers and parents dealing with adolescents in difficulty.