The Psychology of Religion and Coping: Theory, Research, Practice

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“Nice condition actually, does have highlighting. Some minor shelf & reading wear, still a very ...
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Book Title
The Psychology of Religion and Coping: Theory, Research, Practice
MPN
Does not apply
ISBN
9781572306646
Kategorie

Über dieses Produkt

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Guilford Publications
ISBN-10
1572306645
ISBN-13
9781572306646
eBay Product ID (ePID)
1840408

Product Key Features

Number of Pages
548 Pages
Publication Name
Psychology of Religion and Coping : Theory, Research, Practice
Language
English
Publication Year
2001
Subject
Social Work, Clinical Psychology, Psychology of Religion
Type
Textbook
Author
Kenneth I. Pargament
Subject Area
Religion, Social Science, Psychology
Format
Trade Paperback

Dimensions

Item Height
1.1 in
Item Weight
25.6 Oz
Item Length
9 in
Item Width
6.1 in

Additional Product Features

Intended Audience
Scholarly & Professional
Reviews
A massive, scholarly, even-handed, level-headed book....It sets a new standard of excellence for works on religion and psychology., "The book has many appendices and detailed indexes that are very helpful in the study of psychology and religion."--Research News and Opportunities in Science and Theology "The Psychology of Religion and Coping probes ways that religion might be used more fully to help people in crisis...The Psychology of Religion and Coping is an important reference work for mental health practitioners." --The Midwest Book Review "...encyclopedic in scope and highly thought provoking....a book that offers vital sources of information and direction for mental health practitioners, psychology, researchers, and religious professionals; and that serves as an excellent text for courses dealing with the interface of religion, psychology, and mental health." --Death Studies "A wide range of individuals will likely find this book useful. It would be appropriate for graduate courses in religion, coping, and counseling. It is also a good reference book for scholars interested in either of the primary areas covered. It contains and explains a large number of studies and organizes the issues well. For that alone, those interested in religion and coping will make heavy use of the book as a reference. However, those who fail to read it in its entirety may miss the importance of Pargament's theoretical orientation. The theoretical foundation of the work may prove to be its most valuable and lasting contribution....this book is thought provoking, academically solid, and relevant. I highly recommend this book to scholars and practitioners of psychology and religion. It will likely be a long wait until another such impressive work in this area appears." --Journal of the American Academy of Religion "Pargament's process-oriented, contextual approach to coping is one of the major strengths of the book....This book represents a major theoretical and empirical contribution not only to the psychology of religion and clinical/counseling psychology but to other fields as well....Mental health professionals, who traditionally have shunned religion in their own lives and in the lived experience of their clients, might be persuaded by Pargament's broadband approach to investigate how relgion operates in the tales of coping and crisis they hear on a daily basis. This book is also appropriate for courses on the psychology of religion. My students have responded positively to Pargament's careful exposition of his theory, the support he offers in examples from his research and clinical practice, and his engaging use of metaphor." --Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion "...outstanding...offers chaplains and clergy an excellent resource for empirical theology....[This] comprehensive guide...offers us a rich introduction to the spiritual laws of life. Knowing more about them, we can, we hope, cope better and help our patients cope better with life's limits and tragedies. This is a great gift to all of us in pastoral ministry." --Chaplaincy Today "This volume may be the best book on the psychology of religion in a generation or more. Well written and clearly outlined, it is grounded on an immense foundation of empirical data....Pargament provides a nuanced understanding of the roles that religion serves for people....Concluding chapters will aid therapists in assessing the role of religion for their clients. Central to the process is assessing how one's own countertransference issues with religion may impede objective assessment." --Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic "This thoroughly researched and well-written work should be on the reading list of every psychotherapist and counselor. It may well become a foundational book for dealing with religion and religious issues in the therapeutic context....Pargament is able in his concluding chapters to present very grounded and useful advice for how religious beliefs and experience could be better uti, "The book has many appendices and detailed indexes that are very helpful in the study of psychology and religion."--Research News and Opportunities in Science and Theology "Kenneth Pargament has written a comprehensive text on the psychology of religion and coping....provides a thorough analysis on how religion helps and does not help in coping with crisis. Pargament has extensive clinical practice and research in this area....This [is] a book that needs to be read many times and to be used as a reference source. It provides a wealth of research data that can be helpful to the therapist and pastoral counselor who is helping clients with issues of religion and coping. However, he also outlines when it is not helpful. This balanced approach makes this book a 'must' for every clinician's book shelf."--Pastoral Sciences "...encyclopedic in scope and highly thought provoking....a book that offers vital sources of information and direction for mental health practitioners, psychology, researchers, and religious professionals; and that serves as an excellent text for courses dealing with the interface of religion, psychology, and mental health." --Death Studies "A wide range of individuals will likely find this book useful. It would be appropriate for graduate courses in religion, coping, and counseling. It is also a good reference book for scholars interested in either of the primary areas covered. It contains and explains a large number of studies and organizes the issues well. For that alone, those interested in religion and coping will make heavy use of the book as a reference. However, those who fail to read it in its entirety may miss the importance of Pargament's theoretical orientation. The theoretical foundation of the work may prove to be its most valuable and lasting contribution....this book is thought provoking, academically solid, and relevant. I highly recommend this book to scholars and practitioners of psychology and religion. It will likely be a long wait until another such impressive work in this area appears." --Journal of the American Academy of Religion "Pargament's process-oriented, contextual approach to coping is one of the major strengths of the book....This book represents a major theoretical and empirical contribution not only to the psychology of religion and clinical/counseling psychology but to other fields as well....Mental health professionals, who traditionally have shunned religion in their own lives and in the lived experience of their clients, might be persuaded by Pargament's broadband approach to investigate how relgion operates in the tales of coping and crisis they hear on a daily basis. This book is also appropriate for courses on the psychology of religion. My students have responded positively to Pargament's careful exposition of his theory, the support he offers in examples from his research and clinical practice, and his engaging use of metaphor." --Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion "...outstanding...offers chaplains and clergy an excellent resource for empirical theology....[This] comprehensive guide...offers us a rich introduction to the spiritual laws of life. Knowing more about them, we can, we hope, cope better and help our patients cope better with life's limits and tragedies. This is a great gift to all of us in pastoral ministry." --Chaplaincy Today "This volume may be the best book on the psychology of religion in a generation or more. Well written and clearly outlined, it is grounded on an immense foundation of empirical data....Pargament provides a nuanced understanding of the roles that religion serves for people....Concluding chapters will aid therapists in assessing the role of religion for their clients. Central to the process is assessing how one's own countertransference issues with religion may impede objective assessment." --Bulletin of the Menninger, "The definitive work on religion and coping. Encyclopedic in its breadth and depth, the book provides a clinically relevant discussion of religion as a resource for mental health and an analysis of the processes that encourage the conservation and transformation of significance. Dr. Pargament describes the psychology of coping from the complementary vantages of a scholar and clinician. Of note is the sophisticated presentation of theory and empirical data which leads to an appreciation of the role of religion in sustaining meaning and hope in the face of adversity. For the religion scholar, this book provides scientific support for long held assumptions about an important function of faith. For clinicians, this work opens the door for further inquiry into the nature of psychological treatment concerning the provision of hope and articulation of personal meaning. Rarely does one find a book so equally comprehensive and accessible. Academicians and mental health professionals alike will find this volume a thought-provoking contribution to the field." --Edward P. Shafranske, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, Graduate School of Education and Psychology, Pepperdine University and Faculty, Southern California Psychoanalytic Institute; Past President and Fellow of APA Division 36: Psychology of Religion and William Bier Award recipient. "In this fascinating book, Kenneth Pargament links religion and coping using an elegant and articulate conceptual framework. He makes religious coping accessible to the theoretician, the researcher, and the practitioner, and he provides many insights about the multiple functions of religious coping, when it is used, by whom, toward what ends, and with what consequences.The Psychology of Religion and Coping: Theory, Research, and Practiceis a book that the field of coping has needed for a very long time." --Susan Folkman, Ph.D. Professor of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco "Kenneth Pargament has achieved what is all too rare in the psychology of religion: a systematic program of empirical research, guided by theory, that is of practical relevance to helping professionals. No longer is there any excuse for failing to appreciate the subtle and complex ways in which religion and coping interface in the areas of theory, research or practice. This is the authoritative text defining the state of the art in the area of religion and coping." --Ralph W. Hood Jr., Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga; Editor of theJournal for the Scientific Study of Religion; Past President of Division 36 of the APA "We who are clergy know what we do in our ministry and we know its effectiveness. But why is ministry effective'...Here is a way to find out. This work contains a massive amount of information. It presents a coherent way of thinking about ministry--and, in fact, how to improve it." --Larry VandeCreek, D.Min. "The Psychology of Religion and Copingwill provide students with a solid foundation and understanding of religion in the coping process. It is a superbly done work that should be required reading for every student in psychology, the ministry, and related professions. It fills a deep gap in the psychological literature, which for years has neglected perhaps the most important and common way that people cope with stress. " --Harold G. Koenig, MD, MHSc "...a terrific book, especially for anyone who lives as closely to their own and other' search for meaning in stressful life experiences as chaplains do....I found it remarkably readable and thought-provoking throughout....One of the many strong points of the book for us is the author's liberal use of incisive and moving stories....it belongs in the hands of every professional chaplain." --Chaplain Margot Hover,Horizons, Newsletter of the National Association of Catholic Chaplains "This is one of the most comprehensive texts in the field. S, "The definitive work on religion and coping. Encyclopedic in its breadth and depth, the book provides a clinically relevant discussion of religion as a resource for mental health and an analysis of the processes that encourage the conservation and transformation of significance. Dr. Pargament describes the psychology of coping from the complementary vantages of a scholar and clinician. Of note is the sophisticated presentation of theory and empirical data which leads to an appreciation of the role of religion in sustaining meaning and hope in the face of adversity. For the religion scholar, this book provides scientific support for long held assumptions about an important function of faith. For clinicians, this work opens the door for further inquiry into the nature of psychological treatment concerning the provision of hope and articulation of personal meaning. Rarely does one find a book so equally comprehensive and accessible. Academicians and mental health professionals alike will find this volume a thought-provoking contribution to the field." --Edward P. Shafranske, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, Graduate School of Education and Psychology, Pepperdine University and Faculty, Southern California Psychoanalytic Institute; Past President and Fellow of APA Division 36: Psychology of Religion and William Bier Award recipient. "In this fascinating book, Kenneth Pargament links religion and coping using an elegant and articulate conceptual framework. He makes religious coping accessible to the theoretician, the researcher, and the practitioner, and he provides many insights about the multiple functions of religious coping, when it is used, by whom, toward what ends, and with what consequences.The Psychology of Religion and Coping: Theory, Research, and Practiceis a book that the field of coping has needed for a very long time." --Susan Folkman, Ph.D. Professor of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco "Kenneth Pargament has achieved what is all too rare in the psychology of religion: a systematic program of empirical research, guided by theory, that is of practical relevance to helping professionals. No longer is there any excuse for failing to appreciate the subtle and complex ways in which religion and coping interface in the areas of theory, research or practice. This is the authoritative text defining the state of the art in the area of religion and coping." --Ralph W. Hood Jr., Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga; Editor of theJournal for the Scientific Study of Religion; Past President of Division 36 of the APA "We who are clergy know what we do in our ministry and we know its effectiveness. But why is ministry effective'...Here is a way to find out. This work contains a massive amount of information. It presents a coherent way of thinking about ministry--and, in fact, how to improve it." --Larry VandeCreek, D.Min. "The Psychology of Religion and Copingwill provide students with a solid foundation and understanding of religion in the coping process. It is a superbly done work that should be required reading for every student in psychology, the ministry, and related professions. It fills a deep gap in the psychological literature, which for years has neglected perhaps the most important and common way that people cope with stress. " --Harold G. Koenig, MD, MHSc "...a terrific book, especially for anyone who lives as closely to their own and other' search for meaning in stressful life experiences as chaplains do....I found it remarkably readable and thought-provoking throughout....One of the many strong points of the book for us is the author's liberal use of incisive and moving stories....it belongs in the hands of every professional chaplain." --Chaplain Margot Hover,Horizons, Newsletter of the National Association of Catholic Chaplains "This is one of the most comprehensive texts in the field. Second, This volume may be the best book on the psychology of religion in a generation or more. Well written and clearly outlined, it is grounded on an immense foundation of empirical data., "The book has many appendices and detailed indexes that are very helpful in the study of psychology and religion."--Research News and Opportunities in Science and Theology "Kenneth Pargament has written a comprehensive text on the psychology of religion and coping....provides a thorough analysis on how religion helps and does not help in coping with crisis. Pargament has extensive clinical practice and research in this area....This [is] a book that needs to be read many times and to be used as a reference source. It provides a wealth of research data that can be helpful to the therapist and pastoral counselor who is helping clients with issues of religion and coping. However, he also outlines when it is not helpful. This balanced approach makes this book a 'must' for every clinician's book shelf."--Pastoral Sciences "...encyclopedic in scope and highly thought provoking....a book that offers vital sources of information and direction for mental health practitioners, psychology, researchers, and religious professionals; and that serves as an excellent text for courses dealing with the interface of religion, psychology, and mental health." --Death Studies "A wide range of individuals will likely find this book useful. It would be appropriate for graduate courses in religion, coping, and counseling. It is also a good reference book for scholars interested in either of the primary areas covered. It contains and explains a large number of studies and organizes the issues well. For that alone, those interested in religion and coping will make heavy use of the book as a reference. However, those who fail to read it in its entirety may miss the importance of Pargament's theoretical orientation. The theoretical foundation of the work may prove to be its most valuable and lasting contribution....this book is thought provoking, academically solid, and relevant. I highly recommend this book to scholars and practitioners of psychology and religion. It will likely be a long wait until another such impressive work in this area appears." --Journal of the American Academy of Religion "Pargament's process-oriented, contextual approach to coping is one of the major strengths of the book....This book represents a major theoretical and empirical contribution not only to the psychology of religion and clinical/counseling psychology but to other fields as well....Mental health professionals, who traditionally have shunned religion in their own lives and in the lived experience of their clients, might be persuaded by Pargament's broadband approach to investigate how relgion operates in the tales of coping and crisis they hear on a daily basis. This book is also appropriate for courses on the psychology of religion. My students have responded positively to Pargament's careful exposition of his theory, the support he offers in examples from his research and clinical practice, and his engaging use of metaphor." --Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion "...outstanding...offers chaplains and clergy an excellent resource for empirical theology....[This] comprehensive guide...offers us a rich introduction to the spiritual laws of life. Knowing more about them, we can, we hope, cope better and help our patients cope better with life's limits and tragedies. This is a great gift to all of us in pastoral ministry." --Chaplaincy Today "This volume may be the best book on the psychology of religion in a generation or more. Well written and clearly outlined, it is grounded on an immense foundation of empirical data....Pargament provides a nuanced understanding of the roles that religion serves for people....Concluding chapters will aid therapists in assessing the role of religion for their clients. Central to the process is assessing how one's own countertransference issues with religion may impede objective assessment." --Bulletin of the Menninger Clin, "A terrific book, especially for anyone who lives as closely to their own and others' search for meaning in stressful life experiences as chaplains do....Belongs in the hands of every professional chaplain."--Horizons: Newsletter of the National Association of Catholic Chaplains, "A massive, scholarly, even-handed, level-headed book....It sets a new standard of excellence for works on religion and psychology."--American Journal of Psychiatry, "The definitive work on religion and coping. Encyclopedic in its breadth and depth, the book provides a clinically relevant discussion of religion as a resource for mental health and an analysis of the processes that encourage the conservation and transformation of significance. Dr. Pargament describes the psychology of coping from the complementary vantages of a scholar and clinician. Of note is the sophisticated presentation of theory and empirical data which leads to an appreciation of the role of religion in sustaining meaning and hope in the face of adversity. For the religion scholar, this book provides scientific support for long held assumptions about an important function of faith. For clinicians, this work opens the door for further inquiry into the nature of psychological treatment concerning the provision of hope and articulation of personal meaning. Rarely does one find a book so equally comprehensive and accessible. Academicians and mental health professionals alike will find this volume a thought-provoking contribution to the field." --Edward P. Shafranske, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, Graduate School of Education and Psychology, Pepperdine University and Faculty, Southern California Psychoanalytic Institute; Past President and Fellow of APA Division 36: Psychology of Religion and William Bier Award recipient. "In this fascinating book, Kenneth Pargament links religion and coping using an elegant and articulate conceptual framework. He makes religious coping accessible to the theoretician, the researcher, and the practitioner, and he provides many insights about the multiple functions of religious coping, when it is used, by whom, toward what ends, and with what consequences. The Psychology of Religion and Coping: Theory, Research, and Practice is a book that the field of coping has needed for a very long time." --Susan Folkman, Ph.D. Professor of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco "Kenneth Pargament has achieved what is all too rare in the psychology of religion: a systematic program of empirical research, guided by theory, that is of practical relevance to helping professionals. No longer is there any excuse for failing to appreciate the subtle and complex ways in which religion and coping interface in the areas of theory, research or practice. This is the authoritative text defining the state of the art in the area of religion and coping." --Ralph W. Hood Jr., Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga; Editor of the Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion; Past President of Division 36 of the APA "Pargament is a psychologist who writes about religion as a fellow traveler, but a traveler who is also a scientist. We who are clergy know what we do in our ministry and we know its effectiveness. But why is ministry effective? This book helps us with that--it is effective because we help persons cope with life and to find significance in relation to all that is sacred. Have we as clergy ever wondered what psychologists have discovered about religion and how it helps? Here is a way to find out. This work contains a massive amount of information--over 875 references and 260 studies cited in five appendices. It presents a coherent way of thinking about ministry--and, in fact, how to improve it." --Larry VandeCreek, D.Min., Assistant Director, Department of Pastoral Care, The Ohio State University Medical Center "The Psychology of Religion and Coping will provide students with a solid foundation and understanding of religion in the coping process. It is a superbly done work that should be required reading for every student in psychology, the ministry, and related professions. It fills a deep gap in the psychological literature, which for years has neglected perhaps the most important and common way that people cope with stress." --Harold G. Koenig, MD, MHSc "...a terrific book, especially for anyone who liv, This thoroughly researched and well-written work should be on the reading list of every psychotherapist and counselor....Pargament is able in his concluding chapters to present very grounded and useful advice for how religious beliefs and experience could be better utilized in counseling situations, not only as immediate coping devices for current problems, but also as spurs to further psychological and emotional growth., "This thoroughly researched and well-written work should be on the reading list of every psychotherapist and counselor....Pargament is able in his concluding chapters to present very grounded and useful advice for how religious beliefs and experience could be better utilized in counseling situations, not only as immediate coping devices for current problems, but also as spurs to further psychological and emotional growth."--Journal of Religion and Health, A terrific book, especially for anyone who lives as closely to their own and others' search for meaning in stressful life experiences as chaplains do....Belongs in the hands of every professional chaplain., "This volume may be the best book on the psychology of religion in a generation or more. Well written and clearly outlined, it is grounded on an immense foundation of empirical data."--Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic
TitleLeading
The
Dewey Edition
21
Dewey Decimal
200/.1/9
Table Of Content
1. An Introduction to the Psychology of Religion and Coping I. A Perspective on Religion 2. The Sacred and the Search for Significance 3. Religious Pathways and Religious Destinations II. A Perspective on Coping 4. An Introduction to the Concept of Coping 5. The Flow of Coping III. The Religion and Coping Connection 6. When People Turn to Religion: When They Turn Away 7. The Many Faces of Religion in Coping 8. Religion and the Mechanisms of Coping: The Conservation of Significance 9. Religion and the Mechanisms of Coping: The Transformation of Significance IV. Evaluative and Practical Implications 10. Does It Work? Religion and the Outcomes of Coping 11. When Religion Fails: Problems of Integration in the Process of Coping 12. Putting Religion into Practice
Synopsis
When faced with a crisis, why do some people turn to religion to help them cope, while others turn away? Is religious belief merely a defense or a form of denial? Is spirituality a help or a hindrance in times of stress? Building a much-needed bridge between two different worlds of thought and practice-religion and psychology-this volume sensitively interweaves theory with first-hand accounts, clinical insight, and scientific research. The book underscores the need for greater sensitivity to religion and spirituality in the context of helping relationships, and suggests a range of ways that faith might be used more fully to help people in crisis., When faced with a crisis, why do some people turn to religion to help them cope, while others turn away? Is religious belief merely a defense or a form of denial? Is spirituality a help or a hindrance in times of stress? Building a much-needed bridge between two different worlds of thought and practice--religion and psychology--this volume sensitively interweaves theory with first-hand accounts, clinical insight, and scientific research. The book underscores the need for greater sensitivity to religion and spirituality in the context of helping relationships, and suggests a range of ways that faith might be used more fully to help people in crisis., When faced with a crisis, why do some people turn to religion to help them cope, while others turn away? Is religious belief merely a defense or a form of denial? Is religion a help or a hindrance in times of stress? Building a much-needed bridge between two different worlds of thought and practice religion and psychology this volume sensitively interweaves theory with first-hand accounts, clinical insight, and empirical research. The book underscores the need for greater sensitivity to religion and spirituality in the context of helping relationships, and suggests a range of ways that clinicians might work more effectively with religious issues in therapy.
LC Classification Number
BL53

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