Logotherapy and Existential Analysis: 100 Key Points and Techniques is a practical, inspiring guide to Viktor Frankl's meaning-centered approach.
In 100 concise, engaging chapters, it offers a clear roadmap for anyone navigating uncertainty, burnout, loss, loneliness, or the disorienting pace of modern life-whether in their personal journey or professional practice. Drawing from Frankl's timeless framework and contemporary research and clinical developments in the field, the book moves from foundational principles to hands-on techniques and real-world applications across a remarkable range of settings: therapy and counseling, healthcare, education, organizations, community, and beyond. What makes this volume distinctive is its integration of theory, evidence, and ready-to-use practices in one coherent, highly readable format. At a time when uncertainty, disconnection, and rapid change have made the search for meaning more urgent than ever, this book is an invaluable companion-insightful, motivating, and deeply human-for anyone who wants to live and work with greater purpose, courage, and direction.
Logotherapy and Existential Analysis: 100 Key Points and Techniques serves as an indispensable resource for psychotherapists, counsellors, and anyone seeking to integrate meaning-centred perspectives into their personal or professional lives.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Part 1: FOUNDATIONS AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT 1. What is logotherapy? 2. Historical development and Viktor Frankl's journey 3. The Vienna context and psychotherapy landscape 4. Logotherapy's place in contemporary therapy 5. The phenomenological foundation 6. The existential dimension 7. Freedom and responsibility 8. The role of values in logotherapy 9. The primary motivation: will to meaning 10. The existential vacuum 11. Noogenic neurosis 12. The tragic triad 13. Mass neurotic triad 14. Attitudes towards life 15. Dimensional ontology 16. The spiritual (noetic) dimension 17. The role of conscience 18. Meaning in suffering 19. The search for ultimate meaning 20. Collective meaning versus individual meaning 21. Creative pathway to meaning in life 22. Experiential pathway to meaning in life 23. Attitudinal pathway to meaning in life Part 2: THERAPEUTIC FRAMEWORK AND METHODS 24. The three pillars of logotherapy 25. Freedom of will 26. Will to meaning 27. Meaning in life 28. The therapist's role 29. The client's role 30. Therapeutic relationship in logotherapy 31. Assessment from a logotherapeutic perspective 32. Paradoxical intention 33. Dereflection 34. Socratic dialogue 35. Attitude modulation 36. Logo-anchor 37. Meaning-centered interventions 38. Working with values 39. The mountain range exercise 40. Prioritizing meaning 41. Biographical techniques 42. Future orientation methods 43. Working with dreams in logotherapy 44. Metaphor and symbol 45. Storytelling in therapy 46. Creative expression 47. Meditation and mindfulness 48. Journaling and self-reflection 49. Ikigai and meaning in life 50. Sources of meaning in life 51. Phases of the logotherapeutic process Part 3: CLINICAL APPLICATIONS 52. Meaninglessness 53. Demoralization 54. Depression 55. Anxiety 56. Addiction and substance abuse 57. Trauma and PTSD 58. Grief and loss 59. Chronic pain 60. Eating disorders 61. Phobias 62. Life transitions 63. Group logotherapy 64. Family counselling and logotherapy 65. Organizational applications 66. Educational settings 67. Palliative care 68. Children 69. Adolescence 70. Aging and elderly care 71. Community interventions 72. Online and digital applications Part 4: PROFESSIONAL CONSIDERATIONS 73. Ethical framework 74. Therapist's presence and authenticity 75. Resonance and attunement 76. Societal and collective responsibilities of logotherapy 77. Situational Freedom and Positive Anxiety in the logotherapeutic process 78. Boundaries of meaning exploration 79. Research methods 80. Meaning scales 81. New directions in the study of meaning in life 82. Logotherapy in integrative practice 83. Working with religious beliefs 84. Gender and diversity issues 85. The logotherapist's self-care through meaning 86. Therapist self-reflection as practice 87. Language and dialogue in logotherapy 88. Building a logotherapy practice 89. Research on meaning-centered practices Part 5: CONTEMPORARY DEVELOPMENTS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS 90. Cross-cultural adaptations 91. Digital age challenges 92. Meaning and the creative arts 93. Meaning and synchronicity awareness 94. Meaning developments in positive psychology 95. Meanig and the senses 96. Meaning and character stremgths 97. Environmental crisis and meaning 98. Social media and meaning 99. Future challenges 100. The continuing relevance of logotherapy