AgazarianYPetersR (1981) The visible and invisible group. Two perspectives on Group Psychotherapy and Group Process. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
2.
FoulkesSHAnthonyEJ (1965) Group Psychotherapy. The Psychoanalytic Approach. Harmondsworth: Penquin Books.
3.
FoulkesSH (1983) Introduction to group analytic psychotherapy. London: Karnak.
4.
GrothANBurgessAHolmstromL (1977) Rape: power, anger and sexuality. American Journal of Psychiatry134 (11): 1239–43.
5.
HermanJL (2015) Trauma and recovery. The aftermath of violence—from domestic abuse to political terror. New York: Basic Books.
6.
Jabłońska-DzierżaJŁodej-SobańskaWMarczewskaJPawlikJ (2008) Podstawowe procesy i zjawiska w terapeutycznej grupie analitycznej. W: PawlikJ (red.) Psychoterapia analityczna. Procesy i zjawiska grupowe. Warszawa: Eneteia, s. 57–105,. (Basic processes and phenomena in a therapeutic analytical group. In: Pawlik J (ed.) Analytical psychotherapy. Processes and group phenomena. Warszawa: Eneteia, pp. 57–105).
7.
KohonG (2015) Reflections on the Aesthetic Experience. Psychoanalysis and the Uncanny. London: Routledge.
LemmaA (2015) Minding the Body. The body in psychoanalysis and beyond. London: Routledge.
10.
LevinU (2018) The utopia of Bion’s Work Group Mentality—A ‘No Place’ or a ‘Good Place’? Working Groups—Reality or Illusion. In: XV Conference of IGA, Rasztow, 16 June 2018.
11.
OckrentCHTreinerS (2007) Czarna księga kobiet. Warszawa: WAB. (original title: Le livre noir de la condition des femmes, 2006).
12.
OrwidM (2009) Trauma. Kraków: Wydawnictwo Literackie.
13.
StjepanovićT (2020) The healing power of an analytical group in working through the trauma of rape. Group Analysis53(4): 482–497.
14.
TomkiewiczS (2008) Child and war. In: WalewskaK (ed.) Psychoanalysis Today-Child in Therapy. Warszawa: Medipage, pp. 173–193.
15.
World Health Organization (2002) World Report on Violence and Health. Geneva: World Health Organization.