Table of contents for Experiences of depression : theoretical, clinical, and research perspectives / Sidney J. Blatt.


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Table of Contents
Preface
Section I
	Theoretical Formulations and Clinical Examples of 	Anaclitic and 
	Introjective Depression
										 Page	
	Chapter I - Two Types of Depression
A.	 Primary clinical examples					 2
1. Anaclitic (Dependent) depression				 2
2. Introjective (Self-critical) depression				 7
B.	Classic psychoanalytic theories of depression			13
1. Anaclitic depression						28
2. Introjective depression						30
		C. Contemporary psychological theories of depression		35
1.	John Bowlby: An ethological and object relations
 model						35
2.	Silvano Arieti and Jules Bemporad: An interpersonal
 model						42
					
3. Aaron Beck: A cognitive-behavioral model			48
D. Theoretical integration						52
E. Object representation in depression				58
		 
	Chapter II - Clinical Expression of Anaclitic and Introjective Depression
		A. Introjective depression and suicide 				 1
		
		1. Self-criticism (perfectionism) and depression			 9
		
	 		2. Suicide and the representation of transparency and
	 	 cross-sections.							20 
	B. Two types of depression in adolescence				25
		1. Anaclitic depression						25
			a. An anaclitic adolescent boy				32
			
			b. An anaclitic adolescent girl					36
	
		2. Introjective depression						41
			a. An introjective adolescent girl				45
		
			b. An introjective adolescent boy				52
Section II
	Assessment of Anaclitic and Introjective Depression and of 
	Mental Representation
	Chapter III - The Measurement of Anaclitic and Introjective Depressive	 2 
			 Experiences
		A. The Depressive Experiences Questionnaire (DEQ)		 9
		
B.	The Depressive Experiences Questionnaire for 
		 Adolescents (DEQ-A)						14
		
C.	Subscales embedded within DEQ Factor I (Neediness and
Relatedness)							17
		
		D. Other measures of anaclitic and introjective depressive		33
			experiences
					
				1. Sociotropy-Autonomy Scale (SAS)			34
			
				2. Dysfunctional Attitudes Scale (DAS)			35
			
				3. Summary							36
E.	Depressive experiences and gender, race, and social
mobility								38
	Chapter IV - The Assessment of Mental Representation
A.	The development of representations				 1
B.	Assessment of object relations and representations.		11
1. Parental Bonding Instrument (PBI)				12
2. Object Relations Inventory (ORI)				16
	 
	a. Structural dimensions of object representations		16
		(1). Conceptual Level (CL)				16
		(2). Differentiation-Relatedness (D-R)		19
	b. Qualitative-thematic dimensions				22		
		
		(1). Scorable Attributes (SA)				29
	c. Summary							29
	
Section III
		Expressions of Anaclitic and Introjective Depression and Their
		Distal and Proximal Antecedents.
	Chapter V - Anaclitic and Introjective Depression in Clinical and
			 Non-clinical Settings
	
		A. Clinical settings							 3
		
			1. Depression and substance abuse				23
		B. Non-clinical settings						30
C.	Summary								45
1. Self-criticism							45
			2. Interpersonal relatedness (Dependency)			48
			3. Gender differences						49
	Chapter VI - Developmental Origins (Distal Antecedents) 			 1
		
		A. Secure and insecure attachment					 6
		
		B. Children of depressed mothers					19
		C. Retrospective reports of child rearing experiences		36
			1. Descriptions of parents					47
			
		D. Summary								57
	Chapter VII - Precipitating Events (Proximal Antecedents)
	
A.	Stress-diathesis models of anaclitic and introjective		 1
Depression
		B. Action models of anaclitic and introjective depression		10
Section IV
	Chapter VIII - Therapeutic Implications
		A. Therapeutic change in the treatment of depression		 8
			1. Change in mental representations in the therapeutic process	 9
			 
			2. A clinical example						13
				a. Quantitative analysis					16
				b. Qualitative analysis						17
		B. Therapeutic change in anaclitic and introjective patients		30
		C. Processes of therapeutic change					45
 

Library of Congress Subject Headings for this publication: Depression, Mental, Introjection