Six Concepts of Gestalt Psychology & Therapy
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This paper examines six concepts important to understanding Gestalt psychology and therapy, using characters and situations in Tony Kaye's film about two skinhead brothers, American History X. The six Gestalt principles are introjection, projection, retroflection, confluence, denial, and contact cycle. The brothers' personality developments leading to their radical racism and one brother's eventual rejection of the movement provide strong examples of these principles, showing how Gestalt psychology looks at psychopathologic personality development and can be used to work toward personality reintegration. Gestalt is a German word that is usually translated into English as meaning "whole," and Gestalt theory is frequently summed up as following the principle of the whole being more than the sum of its parts. In psychological terms, as Roy Jose Decarvalho (1991) puts it, "The human organism . . . is more than just the additive sum of each isolated and reduced part. The parts affect the whole and vice versa in a continual process of mutual transformation" (p. 43). A number of principles are unique to Gestalt psychology's approach to understanding psychological development. Several are similar to some of the fundamental concepts of Freudian psychology, but differ in important ways that relate to Gestalt's emphasis on looking at the whole individual and the complete processes of personality development. Kaye's (1998) film provides interesting examples of individuals at d
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ge onto those who they see as being different and, by their own definition, inferior. When Daniel claims that his black history teacher, Dr. Sweeney, is "one of those proud-to-be nigger guys," Cameron helps him project even more negative feelings by saying, "He's not proud, no, he's a manipulative, self-righteous Uncle Tom who's trying to make you feel guilty about writing about Adolf Hitler" (Kaye, 1998). Cameron encourages Daniel to keep from feeling any guilt at all for his actions by projecting his guilt onto another person and, by extension, onto another group of people.
The third concept, retroflection, seems at first to be antithetical to the actions of the characters in American History X. Fatout (1992) observes, "Retroflection involves doing to oneself what one would like to do to others. For example, instead of expressing anger to the person with whom one is angry the person turns the anger inward. As a result the angry person becomes very stressed, rigid, and blocked" (p. 84). While Daniel and Derek (especially Derek before he goes to prison) seem to have turned their anger outward, both exhibit symptoms of being stressed, rigid, and blocked. Derek, for example, explodes in rage against his mother's boyfrien
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Donald Moss, Marian Fatout, Daniel Derek, Cameron Gestalt, American History, Mein Kampf, Jose Decarvalho, Daniel Vinyard, History Fatout, Hitler Kaye, fatout 1992, kaye 1998, american history, gestalt psychology, contact cycle, foulkes 1990, projection retroflection confluence, negative feelings, introjection projection, projection retroflection, decarvalho 1991, introjection projection retroflection, fatout 1992 writes, retroflection confluence denial, fatout 1992 observes,
Approximate Word count = 2131
Approximate Pages = 9 (250 words per page)
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