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Monday 15 April 2013

NUDE PSYCHOTHERAPY: A BIBLIOGRAPHY (A-Z)

A
American Psychological Association (1963). Ethical Standards of Psychologists. American Psychologist, 18, 56–60

ANNESLEY, P. (1971, February). Eighteen People in the Nude—And Why They Matter to You. Macleans, 84, 28–32

B
BACK, K. (1973). Beyond Words: The Story of Sensitivity Training and the Encounter Movement. Baltimore: Penguin Books

BARCAN, R. (2004). “Regaining What Mankind Has Lost through Civilization: Early Nudism and Ambivalent Moderns,” Fashion Theory, 8, 63–82

BLANK, L., A. SUGERMAN & L. ROOSA (1968). “Body Concern, Body Image and Nudity,” Psychological Reports, 23, 963–968

BELL, D. (2000). “Naked as Nature Intended,” Body & Society, 6, 127–140

 
BENJAMIN, L. T. (1986). “Why Don’t They Understand Us? A History of Psychology’s Public Image,” American Psychologist, 941–946

 
BINDRIM, E. P. (1947). “A New Displacement Effect in ESP,” Journal of Parapsychology, 11, 208–221

 
BINDRIM, P. (1967). Peak-Oriented Psychotherapy: A Method for Evoking
Peak States and Furthering Emotional Health and Self-Actualization
. Paper presented at the meeting of the American Association for Humanistic Psychology.
Virginia Glenn Papers, Kent State University Archives

BINDRIM, P. (1968a). “A Report on a Nude Marathon: The Effect of Physical Nudity upon the Practice of Interaction in the Marathon Group,” Psychotherapy, Theory, Research and Practice, 5, 180–188

BINDRIM, P. (1968b). “Facilitating Peak Experiences,” in H. Otto & J. Mann (Eds.), Ways of Growth (pp. 115–127). New York: Grossman Publishers

BINDRIM, P. (1969). “Nudity as a Quick Grab for Intimacy in Group Therapy,” Psychology Today, 3, 24–28

BINDRIM, P. (1970). “Naked Therapy,” in P. Nobile (Ed.), The New Eroticism:
Theories, Vogues and Canons
(pp. 98–107),
New York: Random House

BINDRIM, P. (1972). “Nude Marathon Therapy,” in A. Bry (Ed.), Inside Psychotherapy (pp. 141–162). New York: Basic Books.

BINDRIM, P. (1978). Aqua-Energetics in a Body Temperature Pool. Unpublished manuscript, Travis Papers, Archives of the History of American Psychology

BINDRIM, P. (1980). “Group Therapy: Protecting Privacy,” Psychology Today, 14, 24–28

BINDRIM, P. (1981). “Aqua-Energetics,” in R. Corsini (Ed.), Handbook of Innovative Psychotherapies (pp. 32–50), New York: John Wiley & Sons

BLANK, L., A. SUGERMAN & L. ROOSA (1968). “Body Concern, Body Image and Nudity,” Psychological Reports, 23, 963–968

BLANK, L. (1969). “Nudity as a Quest for Life the Way it Was before the Apple,” Psychology Today, 3(18–23)

BULLOUGH, V. (1997). “In Memory of William Hartman,” The Journal of Sex Research, 34(4), 427–428

C
CASLER, L. (1964). “Some Sociopsychological Observations in a Nudist Camp: A Preliminary Study,” Journal of Social
Psychology, 64, 307–323

Columbia College Alumni Register (1967), New York: Columbia University Press

CORSINI, R. J. (1981). Handbook of Innovative Psychotherapies. New York: Wiley

COVER, R. (2003). “The Naked Subject: Nudity, Context and Sexualization in Contemporary Culture,” Body & Society,9, 53–72

CUSHMAN, P. (1990). “Why the Self Is Empty: Toward a Historically Situated Psychology,” American Psychologist, 45, 599–611

D
DANIELS, M. (1988). “The Myth of Self-Actualization,” Journal of
Humanistic Psychology,
28(1), 7–38

DAVIS, G. (1971). Touching. New York: Doubleday

DEVONIS, D. (2002, August). Howard C. Warren: The Naked Truth, Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Psychological Association

DYER, J. (Reporter) (July 15, 1967). CBS News—Los Angeles [Television broadcast]. Maslow Papers, Archives of the History of American Psychology, University of Akron, Akron, OH

E
ELLIOT, J. (1971). “The Nude Marathon: A Conversation with Paul Bindrim,” in L. Blank, G. Gottsegen & M. Gottsegen
(Eds.), Confrontation: Encounters in Self and Interpersonal Awareness (pp. 223–244). New York: Macmillan Company

EVANS, R. I. (1975). Carl Rogers: The Man and his Ideas (1st ed.), New York: Dutton

F
FITHIAN, M. A. (1997). “The Sex History of an Average American Housewife,” in B. Bullough, V. Bullough, M. Fithian,
W. Hartman & R. S. Klein (Eds.), How I Got Into Sex (pp. 141–149). Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books

FULLER, R. C. (2001). Spiritual, but not Religious: Understanding Unchurched
America
, New York: Oxford University
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G
GILBERT, J. B. (2005). Men in the Middle: Searching for Masculinity in the 1950s, Chicago: University of Chicago
Press

GOODSON, A. (1991). Therapy, Nudity & Joy: The Therapeutic Use of Nudity Through the Ages. Los Angeles: Elysium

H
HARAWAY, D. (1991). Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The Reinvention of Nature. New York: Routledge

HARRIS, H. (1979). A Handbook for Aqua-Energetics, Unpublished Master’s thesis, California State University, Northridge

 
HARTMAN, W., M. FITHIAN & D. JOHNSON (1970). Nudist Society. New York: Crown Publishers

 
HARTMAN, W. (1997). “Life as a Sexologist,” in B. Bullough, V. Bullough, M. Fithian, W. Hartman & R. S. Klein (Eds.), How I got Into Sex (pp. 204-214), Amherst, NY: Prometheus

HAU, M. (2003). The Cult of Health and Beauty in Germany: A Social History, 1890–1930. Chicago: University of Chicago Press

HOFFMAN, E. (1988). The Right to be Human: A Biography of Abraham Maslow. Los Angeles: Jeremy Tarcher

 
HOLMES, E. (1938). Science of Mind. New York: Dodd, Mead & Company

 
HOWARD, J. (1968, July 12). “Inhibitions Thrown to the Gentle Winds,” Life, 65, 48–65

 
HOWARD, J. (1970). Please Touch: A Guided Tour of the Human Potential Movement (1st ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill “Human Potential: The Revolution in Feeling,” (1970, November 9). Time

J
JEFFRIES, M. (2006). “For a Genuine and Noble Nakedness?: German Naturism in the Third Reich,” German History, 24,
62–84

K
KOCH, S. (1969). “Psychology Cannot Be a Coherent Science,”Psychology Today, 3, 66–68

KOCH, S. (1971). “The Image of Man Implicit in Encounter Group Theory,” Journal of Humanistic Psychology, 11, 109–128

L
LASCH, C. (1979). The Culture of Narcissism: American Life in an Age of Diminishing Expectations. New York: Norton

LAWRENCE, S. (1969). “Video
Tape and Other Therapeutic Procedures with Nude Marathon Groups,” American
Psychologist, 24, 476–479

LAWRENCE, S. (1971). “From Zazen to Videotape: Encounter Group Innovations,” in L. Blank, G. Gottsegen & M. Gottsegen (Eds.), Confrontation: Encounters in Self and Interpersonal Awareness (pp. 273–299). New York: Macmillan Company

LEAL, A. (1992). “Joy, 20 Years Later: A Conversation with Will Schutz,” Journal of Counseling & Development, 70, 467–474

 
LEARS, T. J. J. (1981). No Place of Grace: Antimodernism and the Transformation of American Culture, New York: Pantheon Books.

 
M
MASLOW, A. H. (1932). “Journal of Abraham Maslow. Maslow Papers,” Archives of the History of American Psychology, University of Akron, Akron, OH

 
MASLOW, A. (1954). Motivation and Personality, New York: Harper & Row

 
MASLOW, A. H. (1965). Eupsychian Management; A Journal, Homewood, Ill., R.D. Irwin.

 
MASLOW, A. H. (1968). Toward a Psychology of Being (2nd ed.). Princeton, NJ: Van Nostrand

 
MASLOW, A. (1979). The Journals of A. H. Maslow, Monterey, CA: Brooks/Cole Publishing Company

 
MASLOW, A. (1980). Religions, Values, and Peak Experiences. New York: Penguin

 
McCARTHY, D. (1998). “Social Nudism, Masculinity, and the Male Nude in the Work of William Theo Brown and Wynn Chamberlain in the 1960s,” Archives of American Art Journal, 38, 28–38

 
McDARRAH, F. (2003). Anarchy, Protest & Rebellion: And the Counterculture That Changed America. New York: Thunder’s Mouth Press

 
MORAWSKI, J., &  G. HORNSTEIN (1991). “Quandary of the Quacks: The Struggle for Expert Knowledge in American Psychology,1890–1940,” in J.
Brown & D. V. Keuren (Eds.), The Estate of Social Knowledge (pp. 106–133), Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press

 
N
NICHOLSON, I. (2001). “Giving up Maleness: Abraham Maslow, Masculinity and the Boundaries of Psychology,” History
of Psychology, 4, 79–91

O
OLIVER, M. (1998, January 8). “E. Paul Bindrim: Father of Nude Psychotherapy,” Los Angeles Times, p. 22

O’NEIL, P. (1967, October 13), Nudity. Life, pp.107–116

P
PARMELEE, M. (1927). Nudism in Modern Life. New York: Alfred Knopf

 
PAUL, G. (1993). “Why Troeltsch? Why Today? Theology for the 21st Century,” Christian Century, 110, 676–677

Psychotherapy—Stripping body & mind. (1968, February 23). Time, p.68.

 
R
RAO, K. R.  (1982). J. B. Rhine, on the Frontiers of Science, Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland

REICH, W. (1949). Character-Analysis (3rd, enl. ed.). New York: Orgone Institute Press. (Original work published in 1941)

REICH, W. (1971). The Function of the Orgasm: Sex-economic Problems of Biological Energy. New York: World

 
ROBINSON, P. A. (1969). The Freudian Left: Wilhelm Reich, Geza Roheim, Herbert Marcuse, New York: Harper & Row.

 
ROOF, W. C. (1993). A Generation of Seekers: The Spiritual Journeys of the Baby Boom Generation (1st ed.). San Francisco: Harper
SanFrancisco

ROOF, W. C. (1998). “Modernity, the Religious, and the Spiritual,” Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 558, 211–224

 
ROSS, C. (2005). Naked Germany: Health, Race and the Nation (English ed.). Oxford, New York: Berg

 
RHINE, J. B. (1937). New Frontiers of the Mind: The Story of the Duke Experiments. New York, Toronto: Farrar & Rhinehart Incorporated

 
RHINE, J. B. (1947). The Reach of the Mind.,New York: W. Sloane Associates

 
S
SCHNEEMANN, C. (1991). “The Obscene Body/Politic,” Art Journal, 50, 28–36

 
SCHROER, S. (2001). Completely Immersed and Totally Exposed: Sexuality in Social Nudism. Paper presented at the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Problems

 
SHARAF, M. R. (1983). Fury On Earth: A Biography of Wilhelm Reich (1st ed.). New York: St Martin’s Press/Marek

 
SLAFF, G. (1980, February 2). “In Libel, Fiction Is No Defense,” The Nation, 104–106

 
SLUIS, B. (1968, January 27). “Psychologist Says You’re Not Really You With Clothes On,” Santa Barbara News. Maslow Papers, Archives of the History of American Psychology, University of Akron, Akron, OH

 
SMITH, H. (1980). “Does Shedding One’s Clothes Imply Shedding One’s Culture? A Cross-Cultural Test of Nudism Claims, International Review of Modern Sociology, 10, 255–268

 
STERN, S. (1961). “The Truth and Nudism,” The Bulletin of the American Sunbathing Association, 10, 1–3

 
STOLLER, F. (1972). “Encounter Group Therapy,” in A. Bry (Ed.), Inside Psychotherapy (pp. 124–139). New York: Basic Books

 
SYMONDS, C. (1971). “A Nude Touchy-Feely Group,” The Journal of Sex
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T
TAYLOR, E. (1999). Shadow Culture Psychology and Spirituality in America. Washington, D.C.: Counterpoint

 
TAYLOR, L. (2002). “The Church of O.” Christianity Today, 46, 38–45

 
THARP, R. (1970). “Therapies, Buff and Blue,” Professional Psychology,
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“The Nudity Problem,” (1974, July 29). Time

 
TOEPFER, K. E. (1997). Empire of Ecstasy: Nudity and Movement in German Body Culture, 1910–1935, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press

 
W
WARREN, H. (1933). “Social Nudism and the Body Taboo,” Psychological Review, 40, 160–183

WEINBERG, Martin (1965). “Sexual Modesty, Social Meanings, and the Nudist Camp,” Social Problems, 12, 311–318

 
WEINBERG, Martin (1966). “Becoming a Nudist”, Psychiatry, 29, 15–24

 
WEINBERG, Martin (1970). “The Nudist Management of Respectability: Strategy for, and Consequences of, the Construction of a Situated Morality,” in J. Douglas (Ed.), Deviance & Respectability: The Social Construction of Moral Meanings (pp. 375–403). New York: Basic Books.


 
WOODALL, E. (2002). The American Nudist Movement: From Cooperative to Capital, the Song Remains the Same. Journal of Popular Culture, 36, 264–268

Writers’ Right and Wrongs. (1980, March 17). Time, p.45

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