FriedmanR (2019) Dream-telling, Relations and Large Groups. London: Routledge.
2.
FroshS (2019) Psychoanalytic Judaism, Judaic Psychoanalysis. Personal communication.
3.
GrossmarkRWrightF (eds) (2014) The One and the Many: Relational Approaches to Group Psychotherapy. Milton, UK: Routledge.
4.
GrossmarkR (2017) Narrating the unsayable: Enactment, repair and creative multiplicity in group psychotherapy. International Journal of Group Psychotherapy67(1): 27–46.
5.
HopperE (1991) Encapsulation as a defence against the fear of annihilation. The International Journal of Psychoanalysis72(4): 607–624. An abridged version is reprinted in HopperE (2003b) Traumatic Experience in the Unconscious Life of Groups. London: Jessica Kingsley Publishers.
6.
HopperEWeinbergH (eds) (2018) The Social Unconscious in Persons, Groups and Societies: Volume 3: The Foundation Matrix Extended and Re-configured. London: Karnac.
7.
RycroftC (1986) Psychoanalysis and Beyond. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
8.
ScheidlingerS (1982) Focus on Group Psychotherapy: Clinical Essays. New York: IUP.
9.
Tubert-OklanderJ (2014) The One and the Many: Relational Psychoanalysis and Group Analysis. London: Routledge.
10.
Tubert-OklanderJ (2019) Beyond psychoanalysis and group analysis. The urgent need for a new paradigm of the human being [43rd Annual Foulkes Lecture]. Group Analysis52(3): 409–426.
11.
Tubert-OklanderJ (2020) ‘Every child that’s born alive . . .’ — Response to Regine Scholz and Earl Hopper. Group Analysis53(1): 119–129.
12.
WeegmannM (2016) Permission to Narrate: Explorations in Group Analysis, Psychoanalysis and Culture. London: Karnac.
13.
YalomI (1980) Existential Psychotherapy. New York: Basic Books.