Though terror speaks to life and death and distress makes of the world a vale of tears, yet shame strikes deepest into the heart of man. While terror and distress hurt, they are wounds inflicted from outside which penetrate the smooth surface of the ego... Shame: Theory, Therapy, Theology - Pągina 1per Stephen Pattison - 2000 - 343 pąginesPrevisualització limitada - Sobre aquest llibre
| Donald L. Nathanson - 1994 - 500 pągines
...distress hurt, they are wounds inflicted from outside which penetrate the smooth surface of the ego; but shame is felt as an inner torment, a sickness of the soul. It does not matter whether the humiliated one has been shamed by derisive laughter or whether he mocks... | |
| Frances Bartkowski - 1995 - 218 pągines
...distress hurt, they are wounds inflicted from outside which penetrate the smooth surface of the ego; but shame is felt as an inner torment, a sickness of the soul. It does not matter whether the humiliated one has been shamed by derisive laughter or whether he mocks... | |
| Irving E. Alexander - 1995 - 296 pągines
...distress hurt, they are wounds inflicted from outside which penetrate the smooth surface of the ego; but shame is felt as an inner torment, a sickness of the soul. It does not matter whether the humiliated one has been shamed by derisive laughter or whether he mocks... | |
| L. Alan Sroufe - 1997 - 284 pągines
...the following way: While terror and distress hurt, they are wounds inflicted from the outside . . . shame is felt as an inner torment, a sickness of the soul . . . the humiliated one . . . feels himself naked, defeated, alienated, lacking in dignity or worth,... | |
| Elspeth Probyn - 2005 - 218 pągines
...intellectual and political interest in shame is that "shame strikes deepest into the heart of man. . . . Shame is felt as an inner torment, a sickness of the soul." 27 It is the affect—for Tomkins, shame is innate and biological in its inception—that shows most... | |
| Brant Cortright - 2010 - 244 pągines
...hurt, they are wounds inflicted from the outside which penetrate the smooth surface of the ego; but shame is felt as an inner torment, a sickness of the soul. It does not matter whether the humiliated one has been shamed by derisive laughter or whether he mocks... | |
| David Gadd, Tony Jefferson - 2007 - 216 pągines
...and distress hurt, they are wounds from outside which penetrate the smooth surface of the ego; but shame is felt as an inner torment, a sickness of the soul' (1963: 118, quoted in ibid: 146). Less evocatively, but perhaps more precisely, Nathanson draws again... | |
| Ellen Tomaszewski - 2008 - 236 pągines
...shame, and so our awareness is limited. Gershen Kaufman in his book, Shame, rays: Unhealthy shame is "sickness of the soul. It is the most poignant experience of the self by the self, whether felt in humiliation or cowardice, or in a sense of failure to cope successfully to challenge. Shame is a wound... | |
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