Part I: Theoretical and Research Perspectives. E. Cardena, The Domain of Dissociation. E.R. Hilgard, Neodissociation Theory. E.Z. Woody, K.S. Bowers, A Frontal Assault on Dissociated Control. F.H. Frankel, Dissociation in Hypnosis and Hysteria: A Concept Aggrandized. P. Brown, Toward a Psychobiological Study of Dissociation and Post?Traumatic Stress Disorder. D. Barrett, Dreaming as a Normal Model for Multiple Personality Disorder. N.P. Spanos, C. Burgess, Hypnosis and Multiple Personality Disorder: A Sociocognitive Model. Part II. Diagnosis, Assessment, and Treatment Perspectives. E. Carlson, J. Armstrong, The Diagnosis and Assessment of Dissociative Disorders. W. Putnam, Dissociative Disorders in Childhood and Adolescents. N. Zelikovsky, S.J. Lynn, The Aftereffects and Assessment of Physical and Psychological Abuse. J. Maldonado, D. Spiegel, The Treatment of Post?traumatic Stress Disorders. D. Sandberg, S.J. Lynn, J.P. Green, Sexual Abuse and Revictimization: Mastery, Dysfunctional Learning, and Dissociation. L.J. West, P.R. Martin, Pseudo?Identity and the Treatment of Personality Change in Victims of Captivity and Cults. R. Horevitz, R.L. Loewenstein, The Rational Treatment of Multiple Personality Disorder. G.K. Ganaway, Transference and Countertransference, Shaping Influences in Dissociative Syndrome. S. Krippner, Cross?Cultural Treatment Perspectives on Dissociative Disorders. Part III: Issues and Controversies. J.F. Kihlstrom, One Hundred Years of Hysteria. J. Tillman, M.R. Nash, P.M. Lerner, Does Trauma Cause Dissociative Pathology? R.F. Belli, E.K.F. Loftus, Recovered Memories of Childhood Abuse. R. Horevitz, Dissociation and Multiple Personality Conflicts and Controversies.
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 and book chapters on these and other topics.
Judith W. Rhue, Ph.D., is professor of Family Medicine at the
Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine and has a private
practice. A fellow of the American Psychological Association's
Division of Psychological Hypnosis (30), she has received awards
for excellence in research from APA Division 30 and from the
Society for Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis. Co-editor (with
Steven Jay Lynn) of the award-winning Theories of Hypnosis, she
serves on the editorial boards of the International Journal of
Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis and Contemporary Hypnosis, is
coeditor of two hypnosis books with Steven Jay Lynn, and has
written numerous articles and book chapters on dissociation,
hypnosis, fantasy, and child abuse.
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