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Available Journals |
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Transactional Analysis
Journal
October 2004 Abstract
| After Four Decades, Is There a Future for
Transactional Analysis in Brazil? |
| Rosa R. Krausz |
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This article presents a historical overview of the
development of transactional analysis in Brazil and an interpretation of this
history using the frame of reference presented by Eric Berne (1963/1974) in his
book Structure and Dynamics of Organizations and Groups. |
| Poverty in Mexico as a Cultural Script |
| Mario Rodarte |
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This article analyzes poverty in Mexico using
transactional analysis, specifically from the point of view of script. The
author describes how the conquest of Mexico by Europeans was a shocking event
for the indigenous people, who lost their traditions, beliefs, leaders, and
often their families. It was a natural decision for the Mexicans to adopt the
systems, education, and religion of their conquerors, usually with little
protest. It is suggested that this decision was equivalent to a decision to be
poor and helpless, out of which a well-defined script developed. The kind of
transactions and some of the games preferred by the poor in Mexico are
analyzed, and the conclusion is reached that poverty in Mexico can be explained
as a script. Furthermore, the author contends that policies that attempt to
address poverty in Mexico without acknowledging and dealing with it on the
level of script will fail to alleviate it in any meaningful way. |
| Codependence: A Transgenerational Script |
| Gloria Noriega Gayol |
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An epidemiological study, based on transactional
analysis theory, was conducted in Mexico City with a sample of 830 women.
Codependence is presented in this study as a disorder in the area of
interpersonal relationships, and specifically, in the well-documented family
situation in which one or more members are addicted to alcohol and/or other
drugs. In this research, the codependence script is presented as an example of
a script (individual, familial, gender, and cultural) that can be transmitted
from one generation to the next (Noriega, 2002. |
| The Synergy Model: Transactional Analysis and
Accelerated Learning |
| José M. Tafoya |
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This article outlines an integrative model that draws
on transactional analysis and the accelerated learning system with the purpose
of improving teaching and learning methods, teacher-student relationships, and
the empowerment of learners. The model is supported by the author's practical
experience and the literature reviewed. The interrelationships that link these
perspectives are explored via three levels of knowledge: first
level-philosophical; second level-theoretical and technical; and third
level-emotive and intuitive. This integrated framework and the tools that
derive from it offer alternative ways of decontaminating the Adult ego state
and/or moving beyond previously acquired beliefs that are found to be limiting.
The article suggests an integrated framework that allows the learner to bypass
such learning barriers, and it presents practical approaches that foster mutual
enrichment and increased potency for both disciplines. |
| The Influence of Injunctions on Chronic
Disease |
| Beatriz Maria Azambuja B. Guimarnes |
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This article describes an interactive action-research
project in which psychology and medicine worked together on the treatment of
Hepatitis C. The goal of this project was not only to understand more about
those who had the disease, but also to investigate the influence their state of
mind had on developing positive behavior change that would support their health
and quality of life. |
| Some Thoughts on the State of the World from a
Transactional Analysis Perspective |
| Octavio Rivas Solís |
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This article considers the state of the world today
from a perspective that integrates transactional analysis with a holistic
vision. Paradoxically, while human beings are the most intelligent living
species, they are also the most predatory. The author suggests that the causes
of this include the materialistic paradigm (i.e., the belief that reality is
comprised of the three-dimensional world) and limitations in educational
processes that occur in families and schools. The negative results are
described in terms of the structural pathology of contaminations, blocking, and
exclusions. In addition, it is suggested that authoritarian and overprotective
behaviors found in systems from the family up to governments have resulted in
inadequate use of the Adult ego state, a search for strokes, and increased game
playing with a corresponding failure in the capacity to ask for, give, and
receive positive strokes. |
| The Social Matrix of Globalization |
| Ksenija Popadic Mihailovic and Dejan Mihailovic |
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This article considers transactional analysis to be a
social therapy capable of producing important changes not only in clients and
their relationships, but also in the social contexts to which they belong. A
rigorous analysis of the contemporary world with regard to capitalism,
neoliberalism, democracy, the new world order, imperialism, and Empire suggests
that an important dysfunctional situation for clients is the internalization of
their social context into their ego states. The usefulness of applying a script
matrix to social phenomena derives from the fact that clients' discomfort is in
great part due to the world in which they live. The authors present a new
social matrix that analyzes the phenomenon of globalization in order to foster
social and political awareness. In this way, rather than supporting the
existing social order, which is repressive and dysfunctional, transactional
analysis can help to support social alternatives that allow individuals
autonomy and instill in them a sense of ethical and social responsibility.
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