Abstract
The history of large group phenomena in relation to group analytic psychotherapy: thestory of the Median Group - This paper presents a history of the large group approach in relation to Foulkesian groupanalytic psychotherapy, including the nature of this approach in relation to Foulkesian principles.Much of the theory reflects Foulkes’s attitude, but there are also clear distinctionsmade, notably a new stance in our thinking about groups as a result of the increase in size(i.e., a membership of about 20), the introduction of the cultural dimension which this increaseentails, and the question of what happens after the resolution of Kleinian, oedipal andfamilial conflicts has been achieved in psychoanalysis and small groups, no-tably what happensonce exile has been achieved. The approach presented proposes to handle the frustrationand hate that these conflicts engender in the form of negative or antilibidinal energies,and their transformation into psychic energy, through dialogue leading from hate to the establishmentof koinonia, or impersonal fellowship, and of microcultural influences whichpromote rather than inhibit communication. Being neither small nor large, a group of about20 members has become known as a median group. Key words: Median Group, exile, koinonia.
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