The Depleted Self: Sin in a Narcissistic AgeFortress Press, 1 gen 1993 - 176 pagine Although narcissism may appear dormant in the 1990s, clinical research on narcissism shows that behind a grandiose, exhibitionistic side lies a shame-ridden half of self-loathing, unworthiness, and depression. Capps says that traditional theologies of guilt are unable to address those gripped by shame and makes a case for a different pastoral approach in counseling and ministry. |
Sommario
xvi | |
The Narcissistic Self | 11 |
The Deadliest Sins of Our Narcissistic Age | 39 |
Sin in a ShameBased Theology | 71 |
Expressive Individualism as Scapegoat | 101 |
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anger apathy attitude Auth autonomy become behavior Bellah Blackman borderline Bursten character structure child Christian Christopher Lasch church clergy concern craving personality Culture deadly sins depleted disorder Dodds DSM-III DSTT Elie Wiesel Emerson emotional Erik Erikson Erikson estrangement exhibitionistic experiences of shame expressive individualism fact family therapy feel gluttony God's grandiose Heinz Kohut human idealizing identify individualists inner institutions Jesus Jonah Kohut and Wolf laity Lasch live lust Lynd manipulative personality melancholy Michel Foucault mirroring moral narcissism narcissistic personality Nineveh one's oneself Otto Kernberg ourselves paranoid types parents pastoral Paul Tillich phallic Press pride and envy psychoanalytic rage Ralph Waldo Emerson reflect relationship religious René Girard response self-depletion self-estrangement Sennett sense shame experience social social realist society story of Jonah suggests theology of guilt theology of shame theory therapeutic Tillich traditional Univ victim W. W. Norton WBHN women words York