About the Author:
Joel Kanter has been a practicing social worker since completing his graduate education at Smith College School for Social Work in 1974. A graduate of the Advanced Psychotherapy Training Program at the Washington School of Psychiatry, he is currently a Senior Clinician with Fairfax County (Virginia) Mental Health Services and is in private practice in Silver Spring, Maryland. He has taught, lectured and written extensively on many topics involving the community treatment of mentally ill clients, including case management, family consultation and day treatment. His publications in these areas include Coping Strategies of Relatives of the Mentally Ill (NAMI, 1984), Clinical Issues in Treating the Chronic Mentally Ill (Jossey-Bass, 1985), Clinical Studies in Case Management (Jossey-Bass, 1995) and over twenty chapters and articles.
Jeremy Holmes is Visiting Professor, Psychoanalysis Unit University College London, and Honorary Consultant Psychotherapist, Tavistock Clinic
Review:
"Joel Kanter has woven together so many diverse events, ideas, tasks, achievements that are all part of Clare’s life, and at the same time he has managed to depict the essential inter-relationship between Clare and Donald which kept the importance of playing and enjoying each other’s company as the context within which the struggles of their lives took place. I am grateful to him." (Pearl King)
"Joel Kanter has edited for us mental health professionals a most important and timely book. Its focus is on the thinking and practice of Clare, whose original profession was social work, and the story of the mutual influences between her and Donald Winnicott, the medical analyst who became her husband. It is as though Clare and Donald began a dialogue that has grown in volume and intensity, and out of which both professions may broaden and deepen in knowledge and therapeutic competence."
(Jean Sanville, Ph.D., Training Analyst,)
"[Clare Winnicott] showed that social workers who spent time with and who could relate with, play with, and talk with children could enable them to deal with their difficulties. Joel Kanter should be thanked for so carefully and clearly bringing Clare Winnicott back to the notice of the world of social work."
(Dr Bob Holman, Visiting Professor in Social Policy,)
"Joel Kanter has edited for us mental health professionals a most important and timely book. Its focus is on the thinking and practice of Clare, whose original profession was social work, and the story of the mutual influences between her and Donald Winnicott, the medical analyst who became her husband. It is as though Clare and Donald began a dialogue that has grown in volume and intensity, and out of which both professions may broaden and deepen in knowledge and therapeutic competence." (Jean Sanville, Ph.D., Training Analyst,)
"[Clare Winnicott] showed that social workers who spent time with and who could relate with, play with, and talk with children could enable them to deal with their difficulties. Joel Kanter should be thanked for so carefully and clearly bringing Clare Winnicott back to the notice of the world of social work." (Dr Bob Holman, Visiting Professor in Social Policy,)
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.