Maria Balaska is a research fellow at the University of Hertfordshire and at Åbo Akademi University. She is the author of a number of articles and books on psychoanalysis, ethics, Wittgenstein, and other topics, including Anxiety and Wonder: On Being Human (Bloomsbury, 2024).
Maria Balaska:
Website: www.mariabalaska.com
Profile at PhilPeople
Twitter/X: @BalaskaMaria
Work discussed in this episode:
Maria Balaska, Anxiety and Wonder: On Being Human (Bloomsbury, 2024)
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About John T. Maier
Sam Wilkinson is a Senior Lecturer in Philosophy in the Department of Sociology, Philosophy and Anthropology at the University of Exeter, whose research has focused on hallucinations, delusions, and the philosophical foundations of psychiatry, among other topics. This interview focuses primarily on his work on auditory verbal hallucinations and his recent book Philosophy of Psychiatry: A Contemporary Introduction (Routledge, 2023).
Sam Wilkinson:
Profile at University of Exeter
Profile at Google Scholar
Twitter/X: @samljwilkinson
Selected work discussed in this episode:
• Sam Wilkinson & Vaughan Bell, The Representation of Agents in Auditory Verbal Hallucinations
• Felicity Deamer & Sam Wilkinson, The speaker behind the voice: therapeutic practice from the perspective of pragmatic theory
• Sam Wilkinson, Philosophy of Psychiatry: A Contemporary Introduction
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Elizabeth Schechter, who is an Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Maryland, College Park, where she is also a member of the Brain and Behavior Institute. The focus of our discussion today is her paper 'Introducing Plurals,' published in the Journal of Cognition and Neuroethics.
Elizabeth Schechter:
• Website
• Profile at University of Maryland
Work discussed in this episode:
• Elizabeth Schechter, Introducing Plurals
• T.M. Luhrmann, When God Talks Back
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Anne-Marie Gagné-Julien is a SSHRC Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Department of Equity, Ethics and Policy at McGill University, where she is affiliated with the Centre for Research in Ethics, the Canada Research Chair in Feminist Ethics and the Canada Research Chair on Epistemic Injustice and Agency. Her work focuses on the nature of mental disorder, medicalization and epistemic injustice in psychiatry, mad studies, and the process of revising the DSM (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders).
About Anne-Marie Gagné-Julien:
• Page at the Centre for Research in Ethics
• Twitter/X
• Google Scholar
Works discussed in this episode:
• Boorse and Antipsychiatry: Same Struggle?
• Dysfunction and the Definition of Mental Disorder in the DSM
• Towards a socially constructed and objective concept of mental disorder
• Wrongful medicalization and epistemic injustice in psychiatry: The case of premenstrual dysphoric disorder
Feedback page for the DSM-5
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Eleanor Byrne is a postdoctoral research fellow at the University of Birmingham. She received her PhD from the University of York in 2022. Her work explores the philosophical and phenomenological aspects of a number of current topics in psychiatry and medicine, including grief, chronic fatigue syndrome, and long COVID.
Eleanor Byrne:
• Website
• Twitter/X
Work discussed in this episode:
• Eleanor Byrne, Striking the balance with epistemic injustice in healthcare: the case of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome/Myalgic Encephalomyelitis
• Eleanor Byrne, Understanding Long Covid: Nosology, social attitudes and stigma
• Eleanor Byrne, Affective scaffolding and chronic illness
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Cheshire Calhoun is Professor of Philosophy at Arizona State University, and the author of multiple books, edited volumes, and prize-winning articles on normative ethics, moral psychology, and feminist philosophy, among other topics.
Website: cheshirecalhoun.com
Karen Stohr is Ryan Family Chair Professor of Metaphysics and Moral Philosophy at Georgetown University, and is also the author of multiple books and articles in ethics, especially contemporary Kantian and Aristotelian ethics; her work has also been featured in the New York Times, NPR, and other major venues.
Website: karen-stohr.facultysite.georgetown.edu
Positive Moral Philosophy
• Website for positive moral philosophy
• OUP book series on positive moral philosophy
• Cheshire Calhoun, "Positive Moral Philosophy: A Proposal"
Other work discussed in this episode
• Karen Stohr, Minding the Gap: Moral Ideals and Moral Improvement
• Cheshire Calhoun, "The Art of Contentment"
• Cheshire Calhoun, "The Virtue of Civility"
Dr. David Brendel is a psychiatrist, author, and executive coach in Belmont Massachusetts. He is a board certified psychiatrist who holds an MD from Harvard Medical School. He directs Leading Minds Executive Coaching, a leading executive coaching firm. He additionally holds a PhD in Philosophy from the University of Chicago and is the author of the book Healing Psychiatry and several articles on the role of philosophical pragmatism in psychiatry.
Dr. David Brendel:
• Website
• Leading Minds Executive Coaching
Works Discussed in this Episode:
• David Brendel, "Reductionism, Eclecticism, and Pragmatism in Psychiatry: The Dialectic of Clinical Explanation," Journal of Medicine and Philosophy
• David Brendel, "A Pragmatic Consideration of the Relationship Between Depression and Melancholia," Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology
• David Brendel, Healing Psychiatry: Bridging the Science/Humanism Divide, MIT Press
• William James, The Varieties of Religious Experience
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Lydia Amir is Lecturer in Philosophy at Tufts University and a leading expert in philosophical practice. She is the author of The Legacy of Nietzsche's Philosophy of Laughter, Philosophy, Humor, and the Human Condition, Taking Philosophy Seriously, and Rethinking Philosophers' Responsibility, as well many other books and articles on philosophy and the transformative power of philosophical practice.
More about Lydia Amir:
• Profile at Tufts
• Profile at Philpeople
• New Yorker article featuring Amir and her work
Selected books:
• The Legacy of Nietzsche's Philosophy of Laughter: Bataille, Deleuze, and Rosset
• Philosophy, Humor, and the Human Condition: Taking Ridicule Seriously
• Taking Philosophy Seriously
• Rethinking Philosophers' Responsibility
• Humor and the Good Life in Modern Philosophy: Shaftesbury, Hamann, Kierkegaard
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Robert Kelly is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Bakersfield College in Bakersfield, California. He is the author of several publications on addiction and ontology, including his paper 'Towards a dispositionalist (and unifying) account of addiction' (Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics, 2023).
Robert Kelly:
• Profile at Bakersfield College
• Profile at Philpeople
Work discussed in this episode:
• Robert Kelly, Towards a dispositionalist (and unifying) account of addiction
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Shane McLoughlin is Lecturer in Character Education at the Jubilee Center for Character and Virtues at the University of Birmingham. His research involves designing and testing interventions that help people to clarify their values and to engage in valued action. He is the author of multiple peer-reviewed articles on the empirical evaluation of interventions, therapies such as Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, and practices of value and value clarification.
Shane McLoughlin:
• Profile at University of Birmingham
• Website
• Twitter/X
• The Jubilee Center for Character and Virtues
Research discussed in this episode:
• ACT: A Process-Based Therapy in Search of a Process (McLoughlin & Roche)
• Development and preliminary validation of the value clarity questionnaire in adults and adolescents (McLoughlin et al.)
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Matt Lundquist is Founder and Director of Tribeca Therapy, a group therapy practice with offices in Lower Manhattan and Park Slope. He holds an MSW from Columbia as well as a Master's in Special Education. His clinical work is influenced by his background in philosophy, and has both expertise and a distinctive perspective on the interplay of philosophy and clinical work.
• Matt Lundquist
• Tribeca Therapy
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Céline Leboeuf is an Associate Professor of Philosophy at Florida International University, and received her PhD from Harvard in 2016. She is the author of many publications on gender, race, and embodiment, as well as the philosophy of Simone de Beauvoir, among other topics.
Céline Leboeuf:
• Website at Florida International University
• Personal website
• @cc_leboeuf
Articles discussed in this episode:
• Céline Leboeuf, "Phenomenology at the Intersection of Gender and Race"
• Céline Leboeuf, "'What Are You?' Addressing Racial Ambiguity"
• Céline Leboeuf, "What Is Body Positivity? The Path from Shame to Pride"
Other readings from this episode:
• William James, "Is Life Worth Living?"
• Thomas Moore, Care of the Soul
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Riana Betzler is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at San Jose State University, and previously held positions at Washington University (St Louis), the University of Cambridge, and the Konrad Lorenz Institute (Austria). She received her Ph.D. in the History and Philosophy of Science from Cambridge. Her primary research project, "The Science and Ethics of Empathy" is an interdisciplinary project addressing debates about empathy and its value in contemporary society.
This interview is an exploration of empathy: the concept of empathy, empirical work on empathy, the history of empathy in philosophical thought, the relationship between empathy and morality, the role of empathy in medicine and clinical work, and much more.
• Riana Betzler, "How the Case for Empathy Overreaches"
• Riana Betzler, "How to Clarify the Aims of Empathy in Medicine"
• Riana Betzler's website
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Steven J. Sandage is Albert and Jessie Danielsen Professor of Psychology of Religion and Theology at Boston University, where he is also Research Director and Senior Staff Psychologist at the Danielsen Institute. He has authored or co-authored several books and many more articles on relational spirituality, the clinical significance of forgiveness, the nature of humility, among many other topics.
About Steven J. Sandage:
• Faculty page at Boston University
• Google Scholar profile
• The Danielsen Institute
Programs mentioned in this episode:
• The Virtue and Flourishing Project
• The "Helping the Helping Professionals" Initiative, funded by the Peale Foundation
Books mentioned in this episode:
• Relational Spirituality in Psychotherapy: Healing Suffering and Promoting Growth (SJ Sandage, D Rupert, GS Stavros, NG Devor)
• Forgiveness and Spirituality in Psychotherapy: A Relational Approach (EL Worthington Jr. & SJ Sandage)
Articles mentioned in this episode:
• Forgiveness in the treatment of borderline personality disorder: A quasi-experimental study (2015). SJ Sandage, B Long, R Moen, PJ Jankowski, EL Worthington Jr., NG Wade & MS Rye.
• Relational dynamics between psychotherapy clients and clinic administrative staff: A pilot study (2017) SJ Sandage, SH Moon, D Rupert, DR Paine, EG Ruffing, LE Kehoe, M Bronstein, & SC Hassen.
Additional resources mentioned in this episode:
• Robert Moore on humility
About John T. Maier:
http://www.jmaier.net/about-me/
Contact The Anomalous Mind:
Email: theanomalousmind@gmail.com
Twitter: @AnomalousMind
Simon Jarrett is a historian and writer, a research fellow at Birbeck, University of London, and the editor of Community Living Magazine. He is the author of Those They Called Idiots:The Idea of the Disabled Mind from 1700 to the Present Day (Reaktion Books, 2020).
• Purchase Those They Called Idiots via Reaktion (UK) or U. of Chicago Press (US).
• More about Community Living Magazine
• More about Corali Dance Company
• Follow @SimonJarrett6 on Twitter
Other work mentioned in this episode:
• Deborah Cohen, Family Secrets: Shame and Privacy in Modern Britain
• C.F. Goodey, A History of Intelligence and 'Intellectual Disability'
About John T. Maier:
http://www.jmaier.net/about-me/
Contact The Anomalous Mind:
Email: theanomalousmind@gmail.com
Twitter: @AnomalousMind
Dr. Clara Humpston is a Research Fellow in Youth Mental Health Methodology at the Institute for Mental Health at the University of Birmingham, and beginning in April 2022 she will be an Assistant Professor at the University of York. Her work ranges broadly over cognitive neuropsychiatry, computational psychiatry, phenomenology, among other fields. Much of her research has focused on improving our understanding of schizophrenia spectrum disorders.
About Clara Humpston:
• Faculty profile
• Google Scholar
• Posts at Psychology Today
Selected Research:
The paradoxical self: Awareness, solipsism and first-rank symptoms in schizophrenia
C Humpston
Behind the opaque curtain: A 20-year longitudinal study of dissociative and first-rank symptoms in schizophrenia-spectrum psychoses, other psychoses and non-psychotic disorders
C Humpston, M Harrow, C Rosen
Innovations in the psychopathology of schizophrenia: a primer for busy clinicians
P Wilson, C Humpston, R Nathan
Finding order within the disorder: a case study exploring the meaningfulness of delusions
R Ritunnano, C Humpston, MR Broome
About John T. Maier:
http://www.jmaier.net/about-me/
Contact The Anomalous Mind:
Email: theanomalousmind@gmail.com
Twitter: @AnomalousMind
Dariusz Galasiński is Professor at the University of Wroclaw, as well as Head of the Centre for Interdisciplinary Research into Health and Illness. He is a linguist and the author of numerous books and articles on language, psychology, psychiatry, and their points of intersection.
Website: dariuszgalasinski.com
Twitter: @d_galasinski
Centre for Interdisciplinary Research into Health and Illness
Selected articles:
• No mental health research without qualitative research. Lancet Psychiatry.
• Language and psychiatry. Lancet Psychiatry.
Selected books:
• Men's Discourses of Depression. Palgrave Macmillan.
• Discourses of Men's Suicide Notes. Bloomsbury.
About John Maier:
http://www.jmaier.net/about-me/
Contact The Anomalous Mind:
Email: theanomalousmind@gmail.com
Twitter: @AnomalousMind
Acacia Parks is the Chief Science Officer at Happify Health and is the author of numerous widely cited publications on positive psychology, digital mental health, and their intersection. She is an Associate Editor of the Journal of Positive Psychology and holds a Ph.D. in Psychology from the University of Pennsylvana.
About Acacia Parks:
Happify Health: Acacia Parks, Ph.D., Chief Science Officer
Google Scholar: Acacia C. Parks
Twitter: @acaciaparks
Psychology Today: The Science of Self-Help
Selected Happify Health products:
Happify
Kopa for Psoriasis
Selected research:
Positive psychotherapy
MEP Seligman, T Rashid, AC Parks
Pursuing happiness in everyday life: The characteristics and behaviors of online happiness seekers
AC Parks, MD Della Porta, RS Pierce, R Zilca, S Lyubomirsky
Disseminating self-help: positive psychology exercises in an online trial
SM Schueller, AC Parks
Positive Psychological Interventions (PPIs) in the age of COVID-19: on the potential impact of digital PPIs on loneliness
AC Parks, EM Boucher
Testing a scalable web and smartphone based intervention to improve depression, anxiety, and resilience: A randomized controlled trial
AC Parks, AL Williams, MM Tugade, KE Hokes, RD Honomichl, RD Zilca
The effects of a digital well-being intervention on patients with chronic conditions: observational study
AC Parks, AL Williams, GM Kackloudis, JL Stafford, EM Boucher, RD Honomichi
About John Maier:
http://www.jmaier.net/about-me/
Contact The Anomalous Mind:
Email: theanomalousmind@gmail.com
Twitter: @ItsAnomalous
Elizabeth Eikey is an Assistant Professor in the Herbert Wertheim School of Public Health and Human Longevity Science as well as The Design Lab at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD). In addition, she is the Director of the Mental Health in Design Lab and the Assistant Director of the iSchool Inclusion Institute. She holds a Ph.D in Information Sciences and Technology from Penn State.
About Elizabeth Eikey:
Webpage: eveikey.weebly.com
Google Scholar: Elizabeth V. Eikey, PhD
Twitter: @eveikey
Selected research:
It's Definitely Been a Journey: A Qualitative Study on How Women with Eating Disorders Use Weight Loss Apps
EV Eikey, MC Reddy
Do Recovery Apps Even Exist?: Why College Women with Eating Disorders Use (But Not Recommend) Diet and Fitness Apps Over Recovery Apps
EV Eikey, Y Chen, K Zheng
Recovery and maintenance: How women with eating disorders use Instagram
EV Eikey, KM Booth
Barriers to and Facilitators of User Engagement With Digital Mental Health Interventions: Systematic Review
J Borghouts, EV Eikey, G Mark, C De Leon, SM Schueller, M Schneider, N Stadnick, K Zheng, D Mukamel, DH Sorkin
Examining the Role of Collaboration in Studies of Health Information Technologies in Biomedical Informatics: A Systematic Review of 25 Years of Research
EV Eikey, MC Reddy, CE Kuziemsky
Designing for privacy management in hospitals: Understanding the gap between user activities and IT staff’s understandings
EV Eikey, AR Murphy, MC Reddy, H Xu
About John Maier:
http://www.jmaier.net/about-me/
Contact The Anomalous Mind:
Email: theanomalousmind@gmail.com
Twitter: @ItsAnomalous
Dr. Kayla Rosen is a staff psychiatrist at UC Santa Barbara Student Health, and also works with Santa Barbara Neighborhood Clinics and Santa Barbara Street Medicine. She holds an MD from the University of Pennsylvania and did her residency at Mass General Hospital and McLean Hospital, where she was chief resident in the Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorders Unit.
About Kayla Rosen:
UC Santa Barbara profile
Santa Barbara Street Medicine profile
About Open Dialogue:
Finland in Boston? Applying Open Dialogue Ideals on a Psychotic Disorders Inpatient Teaching Unit
Kayla Rosen, Joseph Stoklosa
About Open Dialogue
Institute for Dialogic Practice
The Comprehensive Open-Dialogue Approach in Western Lapland: II. Long-term stability of acute psychosis outcomes in advanced community care
Jaakko Seikkula, Birgitta Alakare, Jukka Aaltonen
Open Dialogues in the Present and the Future
Jaakko Seikkula
About John Maier:
http://www.jmaier.net/about-me/
Contact The Anomalous Mind:
Email: theanomalousmind@gmail.com
Twitter: @ItsAnomalous
Smriti Joshi is Lead Psychologist at Wysa and an expert in telehealth delivery. She holds an M.Phil in Clinical Psychology from the University of Delhi and is a Member of the British Psychological Society.
About Smriti Joshi:
Twitter: @SmritiSawhney
LinkedIn: Smriti Joshi, MBPsS
About Wysa:
Website: wysa.io
Twitter: @wysabuddy
Wysa and the NHS
Selected Works:
"Let's Talk, but is Anyone Even Listening?"
Smriti Joshi, TEDx talk
Telepsychotherapy: The Bridge to Continuity in Care and Mental Health Services in Covid-19 and the Post-Covid Era
Smriti Joshi
About John Maier:
http://www.jmaier.net/about-me/
Contact The Anomalous Mind:
Email: theanomalousmind@gmail.com
Twitter: @ItsAnomalous
Clarissa Ong is a PhD student in Clinical Psychology at Utah State University, and a Predoctoral Intern at McLean Hospital. She is the lead author of several widely cited papers on ACT, perfectionism, obsessive compulsive disorder, hoarding, and other topics, and an expert on the emerging topic of Process-Based Therapy.
About Clarissa Ong:
Google Scholar: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=MGiZ6nIAAAAJ
Twitter: @ongclarissaw
Selected Research:
A meta-analysis of dropout rates in acceptance and commitment therapy
Clarissa W Ong, Eric B Lee, Michael P Twohig
A randomized controlled trial of acceptance and commitment therapy for clinical perfectionism
Clarissa W Ong, Eric B Lee, Jennifer Krafft, Carina L Terry, Tyson S Barrett, Michael E Levin, Michael P Twohig
In-Person and Online-Delivered Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Hoarding Disorder: A Multiple Baseline Study
Clarissa W Ong, Jennifer Krafft, Franchessca Panoussi, Julie M Petersen, Michael E Levin, Michael P Twohig
A Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial of Online-Delivered ACT-Enhanced Behavior Therapy for Trichotillomania in Adolescents
Michael P Twohig, Julie M Petersen, Jeremiah Fruge, Clarissa W Ong, Jennifer L Barney, Jennifer Krafft, Eric B Lee, Michael E Levin
Beyond Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: Process-Based Therapy
Clarissa W Ong, Michael E Levin, Michael P Twohig
ACT in Steps: A Transdiagnostic Manual for Learning Acceptance and Commitment Therapy
Michael P Twohig, Michael E Levin, Clarissa W Ong
About John Maier:
http://www.jmaier.net/about-me/
Contact The Anomalous Mind:
Email: theanomalousmind@gmail.com
Twitter: @ItsAnomalous
Dr. Andrea Niles is the Chief Science Officer and Co-Founder of Youper AI. She holds a PhD in Clinical Psychology from the UCLA and is the author of a number of widely-cited articles on anxiety disorders and their treatment. She is also the founder of Digital Mental Health Hub, a community for connecting professionals working in digital mental health.
About Andrea Niles:
Website: https://www.andreaniles.com/
Google Scholar: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=c9vm4fcAAAAJ
Twitter: @PsychNiles
Publications Discussed in this Episode:
Examining the reach of smartphone apps for depression and anxiety
Wasil, A. R., Gillespie, S., Shingleton, R., Wilks, C. R., & Weisz, J. R.
Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Mental Health among 157,213 Americans
JS Yarrington, Ja Lasser, D Garcia, JH Vargas, DD Couto, T Marafon, MG Craske, AN Niles
Randomized controlled trial of expressive writing for psychological and physical health: the moderating role of emotional expressivity
AN Niles, KEB Haltom, CM Mulvenna, MD Lieberman, AL Stanton
Cognitive mediators of treatment for social anxiety disorder: Comparing acceptance and commitment therapy and cognitive-behavioral therapy
AN Niles, LJ Burklund, JJ Arch, MD Lieberman, D Saxbe, MG Craske
About John Maier:
http://www.jmaier.net/about-me/
Contact The Anomalous Mind:
Email: theanomalousmind@gmail.com
Twitter: @ItsAnomalous
Dr. Caroline Figueroa is a Postdoctoral Scholar at the UC Berkeley School of Social Welfare and She holds an MD and an PhD in Neuroscience from the University of Amsterdam, and is currently a Postdoctoral Scholar at the UC Berkeley School of Social Welfare and a Senior Data Science Fellow at Berkeley's D-Lab. Her current work focuses on digital interventions for mental health, with a special focus on interventions for underserved populations.
About Caroline Figueroa:
Profile at D-Lab: dlab.berkeley.edu/people/caroline-figueroa
Google Scholar profile: scholar.google.com/citations?user=15X-lnoAAAAJ
On Medium: https://medium.com/@c.a.figueroa
On Twitter: https://twitter.com/line_figueroa
Interventions and publications discussed in this episode:
The Stay Well at Home Project
Site at Digital Health Equity and Access Lab
The need for a mental health technology revolution in the COVID-19 pandemic
CA Figueroa, A Aguilera
Adaptive learning algorithms to optimize mobile applications for behavioral health: guidelines for design decisions
CA Figueroa, A Aguilera, B Chakraborty, A Modiri, J Aggarwal, N Deliu, U Sarkar, JJ Williams, CR Lyles
Use of digital mental health for marginalized and underserved populations
SM Schueller, JF Hunter, C Figueroa, A Aguilera
Who benefits most from adding technology to depression treatment and how? An analysis of engagement with a texting adjunct for psychotherapy
CA Figueroa, O DeMasi, R Hernandez-Ramos, A Aguilera
About John Maier:
http://www.jmaier.net/about-me/
Contact The Anomalous Mind:
Email: theanomalousmind@gmail.com
Twitter: @ItsAnomalous
Mark O'Connell is a psychotherapist in private practice in New York City. He is the author of The Performing Art of Therapy (Routledge, 2019) and Modern Brides & Modern Grooms (Skyhorse, 2014), as well as numerous academic and popular articles. He holds an MSW from the Silberman School of Social Work and an MFA in Acting from the Trinity Rep Conservatory.
Website:
http://markoconnelltherapist.com/
Books:
The Performing Art of Therapy
Modern Brides & Modern Grooms
Blog (Psychology Today):
Quite Queerly: Exploring the performing art of living
Academic & popular articles:
Publications by Mark O'Connell
About John Maier:
http://www.jmaier.net/about-me/
Contact The Anomalous Mind:
Email: theanomalousmind@gmail.com
Twitter: @ItsAnomalous