Volume 35.1 – 2024

Contains: Editorial Who Do We Think We Are? – Laura Barnett A Phenomenology of Difference: Learning from Fanon’s encounter with existential phenomenology – Manu Bazzano The Critical Voice: A heuristic enquiry into the experience of hearing inner voice to deepen our understanding of its meaning and purpose – Georgina…

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Volume 34.2 – 2023

Contains: Editorial Existential Therapy Trainees’ Perspectives on the Challenges of their Initial Training – Vicki Smith, Viv Burr & Dawn Leeming What is it Like to Teach Existential Therapy in the UK? A qualitative research study – Simon du Plock, Martin Adams & Rosemary Lodge Pedagogical and Clinical Approaches…

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Volume 34.1 – 2023

Contains: Editorial Heartbreak and Despair: An analysis of Kierkegaard’s applicability to secular existential analysis – Cassandra Swick Rewriting the Route of Psychology as an Existential Science: A return to Kierkegaard – Myriam Moreira Protasio & Ana Maria Lopez Calvo de Feijoo The Criticality of Therapeutic Irony for Existence-oriented Therapy…

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Volume 33.2 – 2022

Contains: Race: Can we, should we, suspend judgement? – Haran Rasalingam From Personal Dignity to Mental Health: How patients have taught me that tolerance is bad and respect is good – Rafał Miętkiewicz Feeling Othered: A third culture kid perspective – Marium Akhund What Does It Mean to be…

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Volume 33.1 – 2022

Contains: Monika and Mr Arbutus: On the search for experiential meaning – Chris Goto-Jones Fundamentally Separate? Existential isolation and borderline personality disorder – Juliana Jolly Specialisation From an Existential Perspective: The value of liminality and existing-between-worlds – Marc Boaz Paradoxically ME – Paola Pomponi & Serena Fianco I is…

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Volume 32.2 – 2021

Contains: A Box of Darkness: Transforming the experience of existential loss – Chris Goto-Jones A Discussion of Workplace Bullying: Its impact on the sense of self from an existential phenomenological perspective, and implications for existential clinical practice – Maria Galani The Importance of Existential Courage in Experiencing Boundary Situations…

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Volume 32.1 – 2021

Contains: The Uncanny in the Time of Pandemics: Heideggerian reflections on the Coronavirus – Kevin Aho The Worst Thing, That was the Best Thing, That Ever Happened to Me – Damien Stewart Lockdown: An examination of how trauma challenges the ontology of the frame – Tabitha Draper My Being…

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Volume 31.2 – 2020

Contains: Editorial Paradox, Polarity and the Pandemic: making sense of the existential impacts of COVID-19 on people’s lives – Marc Bush Did you receive the post? Heideggerian leaps into online therapy with children during the COVID-19 pandemic – Claire Francica Out of Your Existential Mind: Madonna, relevance and nuance…

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Volume 31.1 – 2020

Contains: Editorial Shot by Both Sides: Punk Attitude and Existentialism – Stuart Hanscomb The Beauty of the World and the Heart of the Labyrinth: A Consideration of Simone Weil’s Use of Metaphor in Confronting Us With What is Most Difficult in Living – Marion Steel On Learning to ‘Hit…

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Volume 30.2 – 2019

Contains: Attachment And Affect Regulation Theories And The Existential/ Developmental Model – Evgenia T. Georganda Action In The Present: Towards The Application Of Levinasian Approaches To Fatigue In Cognitive-Behavioural Environments – Marc Bush The Process Of Becoming: Maternal Identity In The Transition To Motherhood – Claire Arnold-Baker Reflections On…

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