Body Psychotherapy
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Body Psychotherapy (also known as Body-Oriented Psychotherapy, Somatic Psychology) is a branch of Psychotherapy with roots in the pre-Freudian work of Pierre Janet. It addresses itself to both body and mind, and emphasizes the relationship between the two. This approach found prominence in the work of Wilhelm Reich's Character Analysis and Vegetotherapy, which proceeded to influence therapists in the United States and Europe. Those responsible for significantly developing Body Psychotherapy include:
- Elsworth Baker (Orgonomy)
- David Boadella (Biosynthesis)
- Gerda Boyesen (Biodynamic Psychology)
- Charles Kelly (Radix)
- Ron Kurtz (Hakomi)
- Alexander Lowen (Bioenergetic Analysis)
- Lisbeth Marcher (Bodynamics)
- Susan Aposhyan (Body Mind Psychotherapy)
- Albert Pesso, Diane Boyden-Pesso (Pesso Boyden System Psychomotor, PBSP)
- John Pierrakos (Core Energetics)
- Ola Raknes (Character Analytic Vegetotherapy)
- Jack Lee Rosenberg (IBP)
- Ilana Rubenfeld (Rubenfeld Synergy)
- Christine Caldwell (The Moving Cycle)
- Pat Ogden & Kekuni Minton (Sensorimotor Psychotherapy)
- Myron Sharaf
- Jay Stattman (Unitive Psychotherapy)
- Lynne Zettl & Edward Joseph (Self-Regulation Therapy)