Sign up to save your library
With an OverDrive account, you can save your favorite libraries for at-a-glance information about availability. Find out more about OverDrive accounts.
Find this title in Libby, the library reading app by OverDrive.

Search for a digital library with this title
Title found at these libraries:
Library Name | Distance |
---|---|
Loading... |
In this first history of psychotherapy among the Latter-day Saints, Eric G. Swedin describes how modern psychology has affected the "healing of souls" in the LDS community. But he also shows how this community melded its theological doctrines with mainstream psychiatry when secular concepts clashed with fundamental tenets of Mormonism.
The psychological professions pervasive in twentieth-century American society were viewed as dangerous by some religious communities. Healing Souls describes the LDS community's mixed feelings about science and modernity: while valuing knowledge, Mormons feared a challenge to faith. Nonetheless, psychology courses were introduced at Brigham Young University, and LDS psychotherapists began to introduce new ideas and practices to the community.
Swedin portrays the rise of professional organizations such as the Association of Mormon Counselors and Psychotherapists, as well as the importance of Allen E. Bergin, first director of the BYU Institute for Studies in Values and Human Behavior. Bergin and others paved the way for the LDS adoption of professional psychotherapy as an essential element of their "cure of souls."
Important chapters take up LDS psychopathology, feminist dissent, LDS philosophies of sexuality, and the LDS rejection of mainstream psychotherapy's selfist psychology on the basis of theological doctrines of family salvation, eternalism, and the natural man.
Healing Souls contributes to a more complete historical picture of the mental health professions in North America and a better understanding of how religious traditions and psychology have influenced each other.
| Cover Title Copyright Contents Acknowledgments Introduction 1. Modernity Sets the Stage 2. The Latter-day Saint Community and Modernity 3. The Modern Psychologies and Latter-day Saint Psychological Professionals 4. Allen E. Bergin and the Institute at Brigham Young University 5. The Modern Latter-day Saint Cure of Souls 6. Latter-day Saint Psychopathology 7. Discordant Voices: Feminism and the Roles of Women 8. Latter-day Saint Sexuality 9. The Rejection of Selfist Psychology Conclusion: Contemporary Lives Bibliography Index Back cover |"A very enjoyable book, easily readable and pleasant to peruse."—AMCAP Journal
"A thought-provoking book...The book provides crucial insights into the underlying value systems of modern psychotherapies."—Journal of the American Medical Association
"This book is an important, pioneering contribution to our historical understanding of the relationship between members of the LDS Church and the rising influence of psychology and therapy. It is written so as to be accessible to individuals who are neither LDS nor professionals, although I believe it will be more interesting to those who are."—Journal of Mormon History
The psychological professions pervasive in twentieth-century American society were viewed as dangerous by some religious communities. Healing Souls describes the LDS community's mixed feelings about science and modernity: while valuing knowledge, Mormons feared a challenge to faith. Nonetheless, psychology courses were introduced at Brigham Young University, and LDS psychotherapists began to introduce new ideas and practices to the community.
Swedin portrays the rise of professional organizations such as the Association of Mormon Counselors and Psychotherapists, as well as the importance of Allen E. Bergin, first director of the BYU Institute for Studies in Values and Human Behavior. Bergin and others paved the way for the LDS adoption of professional psychotherapy as an essential element of their "cure of souls."
Important chapters take up LDS psychopathology, feminist dissent, LDS philosophies of sexuality, and the LDS rejection of mainstream psychotherapy's selfist psychology on the basis of theological doctrines of family salvation, eternalism, and the natural man.
Healing Souls contributes to a more complete historical picture of the mental health professions in North America and a better understanding of how religious traditions and psychology have influenced each other.
| Cover Title Copyright Contents Acknowledgments Introduction 1. Modernity Sets the Stage 2. The Latter-day Saint Community and Modernity 3. The Modern Psychologies and Latter-day Saint Psychological Professionals 4. Allen E. Bergin and the Institute at Brigham Young University 5. The Modern Latter-day Saint Cure of Souls 6. Latter-day Saint Psychopathology 7. Discordant Voices: Feminism and the Roles of Women 8. Latter-day Saint Sexuality 9. The Rejection of Selfist Psychology Conclusion: Contemporary Lives Bibliography Index Back cover |"A very enjoyable book, easily readable and pleasant to peruse."—AMCAP Journal
"A thought-provoking book...The book provides crucial insights into the underlying value systems of modern psychotherapies."—Journal of the American Medical Association
"This book is an important, pioneering contribution to our historical understanding of the relationship between members of the LDS Church and the rising influence of psychology and therapy. It is written so as to be accessible to individuals who are neither LDS nor professionals, although I believe it will be more interesting to those who are."—Journal of Mormon History