Aggression Books

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Please Stop Laughing At Me...: One Woman's Inspirational Story

Jodee Blanco

Please Stop Laughing At Me...: One Woman's Inspirational Story Jodee Blanco Amazon Price: $10.36
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By: Adams Media
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 142 Average rating: 3.5 of 5

Not entirely believable 3 out of 5 stars.
1 of 3 people found this review helpful.

I found the author's accounts of bullying to be interesting and dramatic enough to keep me reading but I struggled with the believability of her experiences. Being held down and punched and kicked, suffocated and thrown into traffic exceeds bullying and ventures into the realm of assault. Perhaps in her time the bullying experiences were more severe. Kids don't get away with doing things like that twice in this day and age. I also think she may be exercising a slight bias toward herself being the complete victim without any provoking or invitation on her part. It's interesting how at each new school she started in she HAD a circle of friends almost immediately and those friends were part of the popular crowd. She also had multiple instances of boys taking interest in her. This tells me that it wasn't her looks or style that caused these friends to turn on her. She did come off as having a holier-than-thou attitude and even now in the writing style you can tell she is a bit of a braggart who demands attention. Kids in junior high and high school can pick up on this pretty easily. It's fine to have good morals but some of the occurances in the book made me roll my eyes a bit. If she would have with-held a couple of things from her mother (who in turn always went right to the teachers and other parents) she may have survived a little longer at these schools. The boy/girl party scene comes to mind first. All in all, I found it interesting but not really helpful or believable.

Editorial Review:

In her poignant work, Jodee Blanco tells how school became a frightening and painful place, where threats, humiliation, and assault were as much a part of her daily experience as bubblegum and lip-gloss were for others. It is an unflinching look at what it means to be an outcast, how even the most loving parents can get it wrong, why schools fail, and how bullying is both misunderstood and mishandled.

The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness

Erich Fromm

The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness Erich Fromm Amazon Price: $15.64
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By: Holt Paperbacks
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 13 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Great Analysis of Trying to Understanding Suicide Bombers and the like 4 out of 5 stars.
5 of 6 people found this review helpful.

Erich Fromm is considered by most to be the social science thinker that brought critical theory to America. His insights of using both psychology (neo-Freudian) and sociology are timely, especially today when trying to understanding terrorism's mindset of suicide bombing. Though some of the language is dated, nonetheless, his writing style is simple and concise. Because of this, many considered him just a "popular culture" author rather than an actual theorist.

A great work to read. I often use it for research papers and reports. Highly recommended.

Definitely, Fromm's Masterpiece!!! 5 out of 5 stars.
3 of 3 people found this review helpful.

Fromm's volume "The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness" is the most complete and thorough research on the topic of aggression. It validates the theory that malignant aggression or destructiveness is part of human character, one of the passions we possess like love, ambition, and greed. His book takes the reader on a phenomenal journey that enlightens the mind and unearths the deepest passion in the human heart. Fromm explores with surgical precision the various types of human aggression and the history behind it. His fabulous research is unequivocally the most prolific and exhaustive on this topic. This text is a must read. It will help you discover and understand yourself as well as the world that you live in.

Editorial Review:

In this provocative book, the distinguished author writes to break the deadlock in the struggle between the instinctivism of Konrad Lorenz and behavior psychologist B.F.

Anger: Wisdom for Cooling the Flames

Thich Nhat Hanh

Anger: Wisdom for Cooling the Flames Thich Nhat Hanh List Price: $23.95
By: Riverhead Hardcover
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 55 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Essential reading 5 out of 5 stars.
6 of 6 people found this review helpful.

In a society where anger is "normal" this should be required reading. The author is one of the great spiritual teachers of our time and is very naturally a profound and compassionate psychologist. This is not about "getting it out". You learn to let those hot feelings cool so that you become less and less habituated to angry responses and discover more and more about self-control and, with that, essential self-respect. Strongly recommended even for people without obvious "anger problems". We all live in an angry world. We all need to understand these absolutely debilitating issues.

Editorial Review:

Anger can be one of the most frustrating emotions, carrying us headlong away from ourselves and depositing us into separation and dismay. Vietnamese monk and world teacher Thich Nhat Hanh tackles this most difficult of emotions in Anger. A master at putting complex ideas into simple, colorful packages, Nhat Hanh tells us that, fundamentally, to be angry is to suffer, and that it is our responsibility to alleviate our own suffering. The way to do this is not to fight our emotions or to "let it all out" but to transform ourselves through mindfulness. Emphasizing our basic interdependence, he teaches us how to help others through deep listening and how to water the positive seeds in those around us while starving the negative seeds. Serious though lighthearted, Anger is a handbook not only for transforming anger but for living each moment beautifully. --Brian Bruya

No Contest: The Case Against Competition

Alfie Kohn

No Contest: The Case Against Competition Alfie Kohn Amazon Price: $10.85
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 28 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Did Adam Smith Get It Wrong? 5 out of 5 stars.
9 of 9 people found this review helpful.

Having just finished No Contest: The Case Against Competition, fully twenty years after its first publication, I feel like someone coming late to a party, only to find few have arrived before me in what I expected to be a crowded gathering. Scanning the divergent and often passionate Amazon reviews offered on this provocative, original, and gentle but thoroughly radical critique of our society, I felt compelled to add my voice and ask, simply, did Adam Smith get it wrong?

However you might answer that question, now or after reading No Contest, you will agree that the implications of your own answer are considerable, for you and, perhaps, for us all. Your ideas about competition are fundamental to the way you will live your life each day, to the type of world you will work to create, and to how you will feel about and treat those of us who are around you.

Across twenty-five reviews of No Contest spanning a decade, the book garners a solid four out of five stars, but there is a divergence in these reviews that is telling and important. Amidst mostly five-star ratings and words of praise and encouragement for what is an excellent work, consistently about twenty percent of reviewers rank this book very low and offer commentary that is quite dismissive. These latter reviews seem, in some cases, to lack poignancy and clear expression, an infraction Kohn cannot be accused of, and some are quite hostile.

I bring up this persistent disparity of reactions to No Contest because it underscores a central hypothesis of Kohn's work: that competition and the competitive structures around us alters us. Kohn's assembled research suggests that competition makes us reactive, aggressive, closed to new ideas and inimical to alternatives, bound to the rules of the games we are made to play.

Competition, Kohn argues, makes us less sensitive, less productive, less creative, and perhaps less intelligent. Competition narrows our focus and makes us less able to see our frames of reference for what they are - frames. Ones that are in truth malleable and expandable, and as such, ultimately indefensible. Life in competitive structures, life in a competitive mindset, may even make us less engaged in life itself, as it almost certainly makes us less engaged in others and their lives.

I read No Contest on the recommendation of a friend, after a brief but lasting conversation on the practical virtues of cooperation. As a friend, even if we have not met, I will recommend this book to you too. I make this recommendation with the certainty that No Contest will at least give you an interesting perspective on modern life, that it might provoke and irritate you, and that it may, as other reviewers have noted, cause you to wake up and live differently each day. I certainly feel this third way, and think the book is worth reading, simply given its potential to affect you in this way.

As a book that compiles a diverse body of research, No Contest is technically impressive, especially given its seemingly uncharted subject. Even after twenty years, and even as it is disagreeable to some, I found the book extremely well planned, elegantly written, carefully reasoned, and finely passionate. For some, No Contest will be worth having for the bibliography alone, which is extensive. In fact, its assembled evidence and the startling conclusions they lead to is part of the potentially mind-altering nature of the book. No Contest was not what I expected, and likely will not be what you expect now, with divergent views and passionate reviews apt to continue for some time to come.

A few reviewers have criticized No Contest for not offering enough practical guidance, but I am content to be left to think, and think practically, about its many ideas and conclusions, on my own and with others. We all live in a practical world and so do need work at what we value, but we also need to wonder a bit: if cooperation is superior to competition in category after category of human affairs, why is there simply not more of it around us? Some might argue that cooperation is in fact there, but masked by the heavy and obvious icons of competitiveness that frame modern materialist society.

As I am affected and willing to consider this and the many other important questions the book engenders, perhaps you will be too. Game theory and computer modeling of the last two decades, coming after this book was published, may offer insights into the conditions under which competitive and cooperative structures win out, but as yet not a clear and recognizable path to the states of sustaining cooperation posed as possible and desirable by Kohn. (I would welcome being googled and corrected on this last point.)

One last thought: beginning in the 1970s, the organizational psychologists Chris Argyris and Donald Schon wrote about empirically far more common "model I" group dynamics and, also empirically, far more effective "model II" behaviors. I always was comfortable with these neat non-labels, and thought I understood what they entailed, tacitly attributing the difference to levels of individual and group stress. After reading No Contest, though, I am now far more inclined to think these human patterns should rightly be renamed for what they really are: "competitive" and "cooperative" group dynamics. I'll leave you to consider this idea, important for people working with others and suggestive of what you will encounter with No Contest.

To end somewhat near where I began, let me finish by saying that No Contest is an awakening for many people and an irritant and even an outrage for a few, probably to all who are disciples of Adam Smith, or deacons in the world his ideas have wrought. No Contest stirred in me both a child and an old man, each wiser in the way children and elders can be wise - in their propensity for innocence and in their indifference to headstrong heads - and I hope No Contest will be this for you and more.

Editorial Review:

No Contest stands as the definitive critique of competition. Contrary to accepted wisdom, competition is not basic to human nature; it poisons our relationships and holds us back from doing our best. In this new edition, Alfie Kohn argues that the race to win turns all of us into losers.

The Roots of Evil: The Origins of Genocide and Other Group Violence

Ervin Staub

The Roots of Evil: The Origins of Genocide and Other Group Violence Ervin Staub Amazon Price: $38.49
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Subjects -> Health, Mind & Body -> Psychology & Counseling -> By Topic -> Aggression

Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 4 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Editorial Review:

How can human beings kill or brutalize multitudes of other human beings? Focusing particularly on genocide, but also on other forms of mass killing, torture, and war, Ervin Staub explores the psychological, cultural, and societal roots of group aggression. He sketches a conceptual framework for the many influences on one group's desire to harm another: cultural and social patterns predisposing to violence, historical circumstances resulting in persistent life problems, and needs and modes of adaptation arising from the interaction of these influences. Such notions as cultural stereotyping and devaluation, societal self-concept, moral exclusion, the need for connection, authority orientation, personal and group goals, "better world" ideologies, justification, and moral equilibrium find a place in his analysis, and he addresses the relevant evidence from the behavioral sciences. Within this conceptual framework, Staub then considers the behavior of perpetrators and bystanders in four historical situations: the Holocaust (his primary example), the genocide of Armenians in Turkey, the "autogenocide" in Cambodia, and the "disappearances" in Argentina. Throughout, he is concerned with the roots of caring and the psychology of heroic helpers. In his concluding chapters, he reflects on the socialization of children at home and in schools, and on the societal practices and processes that facilitate the development of caring persons, and of care and cooperation among groups. A wide audience will find The Roots of Evil thought-provoking reading.

Reader's digest parenting guide: what to do when kids are mean to your c (What to Do Parenting Guides, Vol. 1)

Elin McCoy

Reader's digest parenting guide: what to do when kids are mean to your c (What to Do Parenting Guides, Vol. 1) Elin McCoy List Price: $12.95
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

One of the best... 5 out of 5 stars.
46 of 46 people found this review helpful.

I work in an school-based program on teaching children and adults about bullying. This is my new favorite book to recommend to people-particularly parents about this topic. Great advice-practical, straightforward and right on in terms of the latest research on this very important topic. Parents of children who are being bullied are often in a lot of pain themselves and don't know how to help their children. This book takes a non-judgemental approach (It's not your fault!) and gives lots of great strategies-some suggested by children themselves. We use lots of their tips in our workshops. A definite purchase for any parent or teacher who wants to help children to understand this often traumatic experience.

Editorial Review:

One of the more painful parental experiences is watching a child suffer at the hands of other kids and feeling unable to do anything about it. In What to Do ... When Kids Are Mean to Your Child, Elin McCoy helps empower parents to help their kids solve the "bully" problem. One of the book's strengths is the way McCoy consistently turns to the children--as well as parents and experts--for advice. McCoy includes six thoughtful and appropriate tactics for kids (guided, of course, by parents), as well as additional advice for what parents can effectively do. It's a short book, but it's packed with suggestions, including solutions for sibling problems, what to do when it is your child who is mean, how to help your child learn social skills, and where you can go for help.

A Handbook of Play Therapy with Aggressive Children

David Crenshaw, John B. Mordock

A Handbook of Play Therapy with Aggressive Children David Crenshaw, John B. Mordock Amazon Price: $28.59
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

A good resource 4 out of 5 stars.
1 of 1 people found this review helpful.

This book gives great examples and concrete sugestions on how to work w/ aggressive and challanging children. I found the chapter on setting limits very helpful.

Editorial Review:

This book is the most comprehensive and detailed compilation of specific and practical techniques available for child and play therapists to draw on in the treatment of aggressive children. Written by two authors with a combined experience of over 50 years in the residential treatment of severely aggressive and often traumatized children, the book will be invaluable to new as well as seasoned child practitioners because of the broad range of the interventions and the clear rationale that guides their use.

Power and Compassion: Working with Difficult Adolescents and Abused Parents

Jerome A. Price

Power and Compassion: Working with Difficult Adolescents and Abused Parents Jerome A. Price Amazon Price: $25.00
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 3 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

The best of 5 books I've read about defiant teens 5 out of 5 stars.
22 of 23 people found this review helpful.

Yes, I've read 5 books cover to cover. I know this book was written for professional counselors, but as a parent who has spent many hours in counselors offices, this book is invaluable. If you're paying attention, when reading this book, you can recognise whether your counselor is helping you, or wasting your time. When parents are honestly being emotionally abused, they need to be told, and supported in their efforts to take "decisive and responsible action to help their children" as Dr. Price says in his book. If I'd had this book a year ago, I would not have wasted time on a psychiatrist who only served as an abusive teen's good buddy. If you are a parent, another good book on this subject is "The Defiant Child" by Dr. Douglas Riley. Riley's book spends some time on younger children, but if your child is 14, it's not too late to put his book to good use. For parents of teenagers, it is really too late for you to buy "The Explosive Child," by Ross W. Greene. Greene's book is great for parents of younger children. I do recommend Gregory Bodenhamer's book "Parent in Control." but to make his ideas work, parents really have to have some backbone and the backing of others and the community. Trouble is that many of us have the problems we have with our children because we had no backbone in the first place, or our authority has been undermined for too long. We need assistance and support, not blame in order to turn things around for our children. I recommend "Power and Compassion" above all five books I've read for defiant children.

Editorial Review:

When teenagers get out of control, understanding and negotiation often only make things worse. In this solid, no-nonsense guide to working with difficult adolescents and their families, Jerome A. Price makes a passionate case for rescuing parents from invalidation by a society that often views parents as the main cause of their children's problems. He shows how demoralized parents can be undermined by well-meaning professionals and other adults anxious to appear understanding, whose alliances with out-of-control adolescents create an invidious triangle. Recognizing that sometimes parents are victims, not victimizers, the author provides effective strategies to help families break free of self-defeating cycles of control and rebellion. The book delineates the levels and types of abusive behavior in adolescents, and outlines how parents can regain control by learning to be both more understanding and more decisive.

Understanding Aggressive Behavior in Children (Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences)

Understanding Aggressive Behavior in Children (Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences) Amazon Price: $125.00
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Dr. Grisso calls out the answers, but are we listening! 5 out of 5 stars.
4 of 5 people found this review helpful.

Understanding Aggressive Behavior in Children addresses this complex theme in a forthright and understandable manner. Certainly written with the professional clinician as the primary intended audience, yet clearly digestible for the seasoned psychiatric consumer recipient(and concerned family members, etc.) Where does the madness come from? What are its consequences? And, what might the future hold? The author answers these questions, and fills in the assorted "gaps," accordingly. This book is a "must read" for those individuals with hopes of enhancing their understanding of the dynamics at hand!

Editorial Review:

In this work, figures in the field of childhood aggression share what is known about the cultural, biological and psychological roots of violence and develop intervention strategies to deal with the needs of young people. Coverage includes clinical assessment and treatment of children with inappropriate aggressive behaviour; socioenvironmental factors that contribute to inappropriate aggressive behaviour; behavioural and neurobiological consequences of environmental and emotional insults; neurochemical control of aggression and the moral and ethical implications of psychopharmacology in children; and psychosocial intervention strategies for helping children who are excessively aggressive.

Transforming Aggression : Psychotherapy With the Difficult-to-Treat Patient

Frank M. Lachmann

Transforming Aggression : Psychotherapy With the Difficult-to-Treat Patient Frank M. Lachmann Amazon Price: $44.06
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Editorial Review:

Dr. Frank M. Lachmann, eminent clinician, teacher, and researcher, offers help to clinicians working with difficult-to-treat patients. Designed to avoid escalating spirals of aggression and prevent therapeutic stalemates, the process of change begins with an understanding of the nature, causes, and function of the patient's aggression.

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