Logotherapy


Publications


Comprehensive Curriculum in Franklian Psychology

Click on this link for CD order information: Frankkian Psychology on CD

Published Articles on Logotherapy: 1978 - 2005 available on CD click here for order form

New Books About Logotherapy By Institute Members

Viktor Frankl’s Logotherapy: Method of Choice in Ecumenical Pastoral Psychology, (Second Edition), by Ann V. Graber, Ph.D. Available through Amazon.com and other major distributors. Multiple copy discounts are available through the publisher: www.wyndhamhallpress.com.

The Power of Meaningful Intimacy: Key to Successful Relationships, by James C. Crumbaugh, Ph.D, and Rosemary P. Henrion, MSN, MEd, RN.  Available through R. Henrion, 19 Wen Mar, Pass Christian, MS 39571, (228) 452-9573, or ahenrion@cableone.net.

A Life with Meaning: A Guide to the Fundamental Principles of Viktor E. Frankl’s Logotherapy, by Maria Ungar Marshall, Ph.D.  Available through the author at Maria.Marshall@shaw.ca.


Published Articles on Logotherapy: 1978 - 2005

Over a span of more than 20 years,  the following articles were published in The International Forum for  Logotherapy: Journal of Search for Meaning. An enormous amount of schlolarship was involved. The articles stand to the testament of our collective search for meaning.

NOTE: We are in the process of making all of the articles, published between 1978 and 2002,  available on CD. This will happen in the very near future.

 Volume 1, Number 1, Winter 1978-Spring 1979
   

Pages

 
   

Aspects and Prospects of Logotherapy:  A Dialogue with Viktor E. Frankl Interview
   

3-6

 
   

Some Implications of Logotherapy to Community Health    Uriel Meshoulam
   

7-9

 
   

Logotherapy’s Message to Parents and Teachers Elisabeth Lukas
   

10-13

 
   

Logotherapy and Senior Adults Alan P. Farr
   

14-17

 
   

Paradoxical Intention:  A Review of Preliminary Research L. Michael Ascher
   

18-21

 
   

Logotherapy Viktor E. Frankl
   

22-23

 
   

The “Ally Approach” in Teaching and Counseling Margaret G. Alter
   

26-28

 
   

“Rebirth” of a Marriage Gunter Fünke
   

29-30

 
   

The Boy Who was Afraid to Come to School Bianca Z. Hirsch
   

31-32

 
   

A Quadruplegic Finds Meaning Margaret Shilup
   

33-34

 
   

Top
   

 

 
   

 Volume 2, Number 2, Summer-Fall 1979
   

Pages

 
   

The “Ideal” Logotherapist:  Three Contradictions Elisabeth Lukas
   

3-7

 
   

The Noetic Unconscious Joseph Fabry
   

8-11

 
   

Logotherapy in Medical Practice George R. Simms
   

12-14

 
   

A Practical Outline of an Eight-Week Logo Group: Finding Meaning Every Day John M. Quirk
   

15-22

 
   

The Logotherapeutic Intergenerational Communications Group Mignon Eisenberg
   

23-25

 
   

Prisons—Unused Laboratories Didi Sibaja-Makai
   

25-27

 
   

Group Processes for Dyslexic Adolescents Vera Lieban-Kalmar
   

28-29

 
   

Applications in Pastoral Psychology Melvin A. Kimble
   

31-34

 
   

Paradoxical Intention and autogenic Training—Convergence or Incompatibility Tullio Bazzi
   

35-37

 
   

A Case of Endogenous Depression seminar student
   

38-39

 
   

A Case of Noogenic Neurosis seminar student
   

39-40

 
   

Comments Viktor E. Frankl
   

40

 
   

A Combination of Paradoxical Intention and Dereflection Jay I. Levinson
   

40-41

 
   

The Balance Sheet of Meaning in work Walter Böckman
   

42-45

 
   

Top
   

 

 
   

 Volume 3, Spring 1980
   

Pages

 
   

The Place of Logotherapy in the World Today Edith Weisskopf-Joelson
   

3-7

 
   

Kinship with Adlerian Psychology Heinz L. Ansbacher
   

7

 
   

Logotherapy and Religion Hedwig Raskob
   

8-12

 
   

Frankl’s Contributions to the Graduate Program at the US International University W. Ray Tucker
   

12

 
   

Paradoxical Intention, Viewed by a Behavior Therapist L. Michael Ascher
   

13-16

 
   

Treatment of Problem Drinkers James C. Crumbaugh
   

17-18

 
   

Logotherapy’s Contribution to Youth Helen C. Roberts
   

19-21

 
   

Logotherapy and the College Student Mignon Eisenberg
   

22-24

 
   

The Third Culture of the Young Eugenio Fizzotti
   

25-28

 
   

Logotherapy and Education in a Post-Petroleum Society Arthur G. Wirth
   

29-32

 
   

Viktor Frankl: A Precursor for Transpersonal Psychotherapy Kenneth Kelzer, Frances Vaughan, & Richard Gorringe
   

32-35

 
   

A Personal Recollection Alexandra Adler, M. D.
   

35

 
   

Karol Wojtyla and Logotherapy Kazimierz Popielski
   

36-37

 
   

Logotherapy and Social change Guillermo Pareja-Herrera
   

38-39

 
   

Three Faces of Frankl Joseph Fabry
   

60

 
   

Frankl’s Impact on Jewish Life and Thought Reuven P. Bulka
   

41-43

 
   

Visits to Auschwitz and Dachau Robert C. Leslie
   

43

 
   

Logotherapy as a Theory of Culture Walter Böckman
   

44-45

 
   

The Anthropological Foundations of Logotherapy Paul Polak
   

46-48

 
   

Behüt Dich Gott Elisabeth Kübler-Ross
   

48-49

 
   

Logotherapy in Outplacement Counseling Frank Humberger
   

50-53

 
   

My “Second Meeting” With Victor Frankl Mignon Eisenberg
   

53

 
   

The Fourth Human Dimension Hiroshi Takashima
   

54-56

 
   

Foundation Formation and the Will to Meaning Adrian van Kaam
   

57-59

 
   

Top
   

 

 
   

 Volume 3, Number 2, Fall 1980
   

Pages

 
   

Psychotherapy on its Way to Rehumanization Viktor E. Frankl
   

3-9

 
   

The Logotherapy View of Human Nature Elisabeth Lukas
   

10-13

 
   

The Best Possible Advice Elisabeth Lukas
   

13-24

 
   

Modification of Attitudes Elisabeth Lukas
   

25-35

 
   

Philosophical Therapy:  A Variation on Logotherapy William S. Sahakian
   

37-40

 
   

A New Remedy of Narcissism David Williams & Steven Patrick
   

41-43

 
   

Life Purpose and Subjective Wellbeing in Schizophrenic Patients Ruth Hablas, R. R. Hutzell, & Ed Bolin
   

44-45

 
   

Top
   

 

 
   

 Volume 4, Number 1, Spring/Summer 1981
   

Pages

 
   

The Frontiers of Logotherapy Joseph Fabry
   

3-11

 
   

New Ways for Dereflection Elisabeth Lukas
   

13-28

 
   

Logotherapy: New Help for Problem Drinkers James C. Crumbaugh
   

29-34

 
   

The Executive in an Age of Alienation Frank E. Humberger
   

35-44

 
   

Teacher Frustration in the American Public School System
Bianca Z. Hirsch
   

45-48

 
   

Life Review and Life Preview
Mignon Eisenberg
   

49-51

 
   

Application of Paradoxical Intention by Other Schools of Therapy
L. Michael Ascher
   

52-55

 
   

Letter to an Unknown Lady
Elisabeth Lukas
   

56-58

 
   

Top
   

 

 
   

 Volume 4, Number 2, Fall/Winter 1981
   

Pages

 
   

The Future of Logotherapy Viktor E. Frankl
   

71-78

 
   

The Existential Vacuum in Eastern Europe  R. E. Stecker
   

79-82

 
   

Logotherapy in Tanzania  Louis L. Klitzke
   

83-88

 
   

Applications in Korea  Byung-Hak Ko
   

89-93

 
   

My Use of Logotherapy with Clients   Edith Eva Eger
   

94-100

 
   

Rehabilitative Nursing and Logotherapy: A study of Spinal Cord Injured Adults   Patricia L. Starck
   

101-109

 
   

Suffering, Tension, and Human Service  Arthur Hoffer
   

110-115

 
   

A Validation of Logotherapy Elisabeth Lukas
   

116-125

 
   

The Disabled and the Authentic Self
Carol Lynn
   

126-128

 
   

What the Will to Meaning May Achieve
Guido Korfgen
   

129

 
   

Top
   

 

 
   

 Volume 5, Number 1, Spring/Summer 1982
   

Pages

 
   

The Question of Death in Logotherapy
George Kovacs
   

3-8

 
   

Logogeriatrics
Uwe Böschemeyer
   

9-15

 
   

An Example of Improvisation
Kazimierz Popielski
   

16-19

 
   

The  “Birthmarks” of Paradoxical Intention
Elisabeth Lukas
   

20-24

 
   

Some Practical Hints About Paradoxical Intention
Joseph Fabry
   

25-30

 
   

The Belfast Test:  A New Psychometric Approach to Logotherapy
Bruno Giorgi, Jr.
   

31-37

 
   

Case Studies with Juvenile Delinquents
Louis S. Barber
   

38-43

 
   

Meaning in Family Therapy
James E. Lantz
   

44-46

 
   

Counseling the Aged
Robert C. Leslie
   

47-52

 
   

Report from U-One-South-Nine
Frank E. Wood
   

53-56

 
   

A Journey into Meaning
Jerry L. Long
   

57-58

 
   

Top
   

 

 
   

 Volume 5, Number 2, Fall/Winter 1982
   

Pages

 
   

From the Bitter Came Forth the Sweet
Mignon Eisenberg
   

67-71

 
   

The Pursuit of Meaning for Youth in the 1980s: Social Stagnancy
Derek L. Dean
   

74-76

 
   

What Logotherapy Can Learn from High School Students
Stephen S. Kalmar
   

77-84

 
   

Logotherapy:  A Grief Counseling Process
MaryAnn Maniacek
   

85-91

 
   

The “Terrestrial” Meanings of Life
Irvin D. Yalom
   

92-102

 
   

Logotherapy in U. S. Universities—A Survey
Bianca Z. Hirsch & Very Lieban-Kalmar
   

103-105

 
   

Dialogo Group Work and Social Change
Norman N. Goroff
   

106-114

 
   

Transference and Countertransference in Logotherapy
George A. Sargent III
   

115-118

 
   

Dereflection in Family Therapy with Schizophrenic Clients
James E. Lantz
   

119-122

 
   

Top
   

 

 
   

 Volume 6, Number 1, Spring/Summer 1983
   

Pages

 
   

Counseling Tactics and Personality Structure
Elisabeth Lukas
   

3-18

 
   

A Child, Paradoxical Intention, and Consciousness
James D. Yoder
   

19-21

 
   

Paradise Lost? Betwixt and Between
Christopher R. Stones
   

22-27

 
   

Treatment of Snake Phobia: Combining Paradoxical Intention with Behavior Modification
            George Sargent
   

28-30

 
   

There’s Something About That Name
William L. Hanks, Jr.
   

31-33

 
   

Logotherapy in Prison
Michael F. Whiddon
   

34-39

 
   

Treatment of Existential Frustration
Vlastimil Siroky
   

40-41

 
   

A Well Beside the Crossroad
Ginta Palubinkas
   

42-43

 
   

A Creation Myth of Meaning
Jeffrey Mitchell
   

44-46

 
   

Alcoholic Recovery by Videotape
James C. Crumbaugh
   

47-49

 
   

Takashima’s Noo-Psychosomatic Medicine
Paul Naitoh
   

50-54

 
   

PIL Test on Cancer Patients: Preliminary Report
Rosemary Henrion
   

55-59

 
   

Top
   

 

 
   

 Volume 6, Number 2, Fall/Winter 1983
   

Pages

Logotherapy in Israel
Mignon Eisenberg
   

67-73

Practical Steps in Logoanalysis
Robert R. Hutzell
   

74-83

The Pursuit of Meaning for Youth in the 1980’s
Wendy L. Pohlers
   

86-88

Logotherapy and “Drawing Anxiety”
Frederic H. Jones
   

89-91

Logotherapeutic Treatment of Neurotic Sleep disturbances
Heinz Gall
   

92-94

Remarks from a Free-Floating Spirit
Edith Weisskopf-Joelson
   

98-101

Love and Work in Frankl’s View of Human Nature
Elisabeth Lukas
   

102-109

Patients’ Perceptions of the Meaning of Suffering
Patricia L. Starck
   

110-116

A College Test of Logotherapeutic Concepts
Ernest J. Nackord, Jr. as told to Joseph Fabry
   

117-122

Top
   

 

 Volume 7, Number 1, Spring/Summer 1984
   

Pages

The Meaning Crisis in the First World and Hunger in the Third World
Viktor E. Frankl
   

5-7

Logotherapy as an answer to Burnout
Reuven P. Bulka
   

8-17

Logophilosophy for Israeli’s Retirees in the Helping Professions
   

18-25

Responsibility and meaning in Treatment of Schizophrenics
James E. Lantz
   

26-28

Logotherapy and the Book of Job
Alan J. Atlas
   

29-33

Odysseus: His Myth and Meaning for Logotherapy
Ruth Hablas
   

34-39

Logoanalysis for Alcoholics
Robert R. Hutzell
   

40-45

Finding Meaning through Existential Guild
Philip J. Sternig
   

46-49

A Progress Report on Three Patients
Guido Körfgen
   

50-54

Maurice and Mr. Sleep
Jovita Riveros de Carbone
   

55-56

Top
   

 

 Volume 7, Number 2, Fall/Winter 1984
   

Pages

Human Dignity and Psychotherapy: mergence Through Logotherapy
Elisabeth Lukas
   

67-84

Logotherapeutic Support Groups for Cardiac patients
Edward Lazar
   

85-88

The Quest for Meaning among Today’s Youth
Karl Dienelt
   

89-95

Working the Troubled Adolescents
Jane R. Silvius
   

96-99

The Explosion in Meaning
Robert E. Carter
   

100-102

Rehumanizing the Computer Age through Logotherapy
Philip A. Dinauer
   

103-105

Humor in Logotherapy
Michael F. Shaughnessy
   

106-111

Combating Stress and Burnout among Correctional Employees
Leonard E. Miller & Steven T. Adwell
   

112-117

Growth States in Logotherapy
James E. Lantz
   

118-120

The Noetic Curative Factor in Group Therapy
James E. Lantz
   

121-123

Top
   

 

 Volume 8, Number 1, Spring/Summer 1985
   

Pages

Recollection from the Early Days
Lotte Bodendorfer
   

5-6

The Meaning of Logotherapy for clinical Psychology
Elisabeth Lukas
   

7-10

Viktor Frankl’s Meaning for Psychology
William S. Sahakian
   

11-16

Viktor E. Frankl’s “Place” in Philosophy
George Kovacs
   

17-21

Viktor Frankl’s Meaning for Pastoral Counseling
Robert C. Leslie
   

22-27

Logotherapy in the Psychotherapeutic Smorgasbord
James C. Crumbaugh
   

28-33

Education for a Synthetic Planet: Logotherapy and Learning for Responsibility
Arthur G. Wirth
   

34-40

Logotherapy:  A Critical Component of Modern Nursing
Patricia L. Starck
   

41-43

Rehumanizing University Teaching
Mignon Eisenberg
   

44-46

Logotherapy’s Impact on Counseling the Executive
Frank E. Humberger
   

47-53

Logotherapy and Buddhistic Thought
Hiroshi Takashima
   

54-56

The Promise of Logotherapy in the Socialist World
R. E. Stecker
   

57-60

Top
   

 

 Volume 8, Number 2, Fall/Winter 1985
   

Pages

Logotherapy Comes of Age:  Birth of a Theory
Patricia L. Starck
   

71-75

New Hope for People in Chronic Pain
Michael F. Whiddon
   

76-81

Logotherapeutic Enlightenment in Therapist and client: A Case Study
Wynand du Plessis
   

82-85

New Life through Logotherapy: Observations by a Former Patient
Barb Steidl
   

86-88

Can Logotherapy Help Cancer Patients?
Elisabeth Jahoda
   

89-93

Reduction of Depression in Relatives of Schizophrenic Clients
James E. Lantz
   

94-96

An MMPI Existential Vacuum Scale for Logotherapy research
Robert R. Hutzell & Thomas J. Peterson
   

97-100

Conscience in Logotherapeutic Counseling
James D. Yoder
   

101-108

Meaing in Life of cancer Patients Receiving Adjuvant Therapy
Victor Florian
   

109-121

Top
   

 

 Volume 9, Number 1, Spring/Summer 1986
   

Pages

The Language of Psychotherapy
Rudolf Ekstein
   

7-10

Understanding Human Nature:  Freud, Adler, Frankl
Steven S. Kalmar
   

11-20

Logophilosophy as Preventive Therapy
Mignon Eisenberg
   

23-28

Logotherapy and the Person of the Therapist
James E. Lantz
   

29-32

Logodrama and Philosophical Psychotherapy
William S. Sahakian
   

33-38

Logotherapy East—West
Rudolphy Krejci
   

40-46

Logotherapy and the Amish: Meaning and the Maintenance of a Traditional Society
Henry Troyer
   

47-53

Discerning Meaning Through a Self-Discovery Program
Florence I. Ernzen
   

54-56

Top
   

 

Volume 9, Number 2, Fall/Winter 1986
   

Pages

Personal Conscience and Global Concern
Edith Eva Eger
   

68-70

Youth—A Continuous Search for Meaning
Lisabeth Lukas
   

71-79

Personal Choice and the Nazi State :  A Logotherapeutic Approach in the Classroom
Claire Hirshfield
   

80-86

A Melanesian Quest for Meaning
Wolfgang G. Jilek & Louise Jilek-Aall
   

87-92

Reasons versus Causes as Explanation of Human Behavior
Jerry L. Long, Jr.
   

93-99

Logos and the Farm Crisis of America
Joseph Graca
   

100-101

The Encounter with Meaningless in Crisis Intervention
Roberta G. Sands
   

102-108

Communicating Logotherapy
William Blair Gould
   

109-111

Reviving the Shattered Spirit:  The Missing Link in Rehabilitation
Patricia E. Haines
   

112-115

The Ground of Meaning:  Logotherapy, Psychotherapy, and Kohlberg’s Developmentalism
Robert E. Carter
   

116-124

Logotherapy:  Implications for Personal Goals
R. R. Hutzell
   

125-129

Top
   

 

Volume 10, Number 1, Spring/Summer 1987
   

Pages

On the Meaning of Love
Viktor E. Frankl
   

5-8

Logotherapy: Health through Meaning
Elisabeth Lukas
   

9-16

Schizophrenia and the Existential Vacuum
James Lantz & john Belcher
   

17-21

Franklian Family Therapy
James Lantz
   

22-28

A Question of Meaning: Rabbinic Counseling and Logotherapeutic Models
Yaakov Thompson
   

29-24

The Symbolic Growth Experience and the Creation of Meaning
Willard B. Frick
   

35-41

The Three Sacred Treasures and the Rehumanization of Medicine
Hiroshi Takashima
   

42-43

Hinduism and Logotherapy
Sitansu S. Chakravarti
   

44-45

The Meaningful Personality
               Michael F. Shaughnessy & Robert Evans
   

46-49

Despair – An “Absolutization: of Values
               Marian Wolicki
   

50-51

Psychogenic Neuroticism and Noogenic Self-Strengthening
               Moshe Addad
   

52-59

Pedagogy and Logotherapy
               Charles Okechukwu Iwundu
   

60-62

Top
   

 

Volume 10, Number 2, Fall/Winter 1987
   

Pages

Frankl in the Context of Personality Theorists
Robert F. Massey
   

67-84

Logotherapy for Chronic Pain
Manoochehr Khatami
   

85-91

Lawyers, Liquor, and Logotherapy
Robin Goodenough
   

92-99

Application of Rotter’s Learning Theory to Teaching Logotherapy
Vera Lieban-Kalmar
   

100-104

Logotherapeutic Intervention for Families in Early Chemical Dependency Recovery
Patricia E. Haines
   

105-109

Family Treatment and the Noetic Curative Factor
James Lantz & Richard First
   

110-111

Making Logotherapy a Reality in Treating Alcoholics
Rosemary Henrion
   

112-117

Scheler’s “Philosophy of the Heart” and Frankl’s Understanding of the Self
William Blair Gould
   

118-123

Top
   

 

 Volume 11, Number 1, Spring/Summer 1988
   

Pages

A Meaning Model in Family Treatment
James Lantz & Mary Pegram
   

2-4

Dilemmas of Today—Logotherapy Proposals
Joseph Fabry
   

5-12

Logomedicine:  A Doctor-Patient Partnership
Edward Lazar
   

13-16

Ethological Existentialism for Substance Abuse
Harold D. Rosenheim
   

17-22

The Secular Character of Logotherapy
Stephen S. Kalmar
   

23-28

Logotherapy and African-Oriented Therapy
Charles Okechukwu Iwundu
   

27-30

Egocentricity and Two Conceptual approaches to Meaning in Life
Joseph T. McCann & Mary Kay Biaggio
   

31-37

Listen to Life:  A Tribute to Joe Through Logotherapy
Carol Crosby
   

38-41

A Critique of Logotherapy as Personality Theory
Robert F. Massey
   

42-54

Childlike Adults and Meaning in Life
Paul Welter
   

55-59

Top
   

 

 Volume 11, Number 2, Fall/Winter 1988
   

Pages

Clinical Application of the Logochart
Manoochehr Khatami
   

67-75

The PIL Test : Administration, Interpretation, Uses Theory and Critique
James C. Crumbaugh & Rosemary Henrion
   

76-88

A Review of the Purpose in Life Test
R. R. Hutzell
   

89-101

Group Logotherapy in Latin America
José V. Martinez Romero
   

102-106

Logotherapy and the Hypersomatic Family
Jim Lantz & Karen V. Harper
   

107-110

Logotheory in Hospice Social Work
Ellen Gibson, Janet Forrest, Elisa McIntire, Marilyn Shannon, Jean Stephan & Pam Walker
   

111-116

Family Logotherapy for Weight Reduction
Jim Lantz & Karen T. Harper
   

117-121

A Comparison of Socrates’ and Frankl’s Philosophical Fundamentals and Methods
   

122-123

Top
   

 

 Volume 12, Number 1, Spring 1989
   

Pages

Meaningful Education
Lisabeth Lukas
   

5-11

Logotherapy in Schools
Hans-Norbert Hoppe
   

12-16

Logotherapeutic Approaches to Crisis Situations
Uwe Böschemeyer
   

17-22

A Logotherapeutic Support Group for Mothers of Special Children
Mary Harris Pegram
   

23-27

Logotherapy: Meaning and Intimacy
James D. Yoder
   

28-39

Psychopathology and Life Purpose
George B. Kish & David R. Moody
   

40-45

Logotherapy in Behavioral Sex Counseling with the Developmentally Handicapped
Dave Hingsburger
   

46-56

The Existential Vacuum in Bergman’s “Scenes from a Marriage”
Jim Lantz
   

57-58

The Use of Meaning for the Elderly
Melvin A. Kimble & James W. Ellor
   

59-61

Top
   

 

 Volume 12, Number 2, Fall 1989
   

Pages

Caring:  The Ethical Imperative of the Healing Arts and Sciences
Hans W. Uffelmann
   

66-72

Logotherapy as Homecoming
James D. Yoder
   

74-81

Finding Meaning in Suffering: A Personal Account
Robert C. Barnes
   

82-88

Exposing Prisoners to Logotherapy
Mignon Eisenberg
   

89-94

Logotherapy for Former Prisoners
Rosemary Henrion
   

95-96

Logotherapy and Nursing Practice
Charlotte Stefanics
   

97-100

Existential Vacuum in Grieving Widows
Jay I. Levinson
   

101-109

Moral Judgment and Meaning in Life
Moseh Addad & Avraham Leslau
   

110-116

The Meaning of the Moment:  The Logotherapeutic Dimension of Everydayness
Sandra A. Wawrytko
   

117-123

Top
   

 

 Volume 13, Number 1, Spring 1990
   

Pages

85 Years of Milestones in the History of Logotherapy
Stephen S. Kalmar
   

3-6

The Meaning Crisis in Affluent Argentina
J. V. Martinez Romero, S. M. Munton, M. A. Parayola, A. Saenz
   

7-14

Logotherapy in Reproductive Medicine
Christopher S. E. Wurm
   

15-16

Existential Analysis Psychotherapy
Alfried Längle
   

17-19

Two Poems
Tom McKillop
   

20

Suffering and Religiosity
Karl-Dieter Heines
   

21

Did You Know You Just Gave a Logotherapy Address?
Walter Böckmann
   

22-23

Self-Help and Crisis Intervention
Elisabeth Lukas
   

24-31

With Viktor Frankl in Jerusalem
Mignon Eisenberg
   

32-33

Educational Aspects in the International Forum for Logotherapy
Eugenio Fizzotti
   

34-37

Work and Play in Education
Hiroshi Takashima
   

38

The Use of Pictures in Logotherapy
Charles Okechukwu Iwundu
   

39

A “Case History” from Frankl’s Files
Bjarne Kvilhaugh
   

40-45

V. Frankl and V. Havel: Two Lives in One Time
Guillermo Pareja Herrara
   

46-48

Universal Truths
Kasimierz Popielski
   

49-50

A Lesson for me and South Africa
Patti Havenga
   

51-53

The Logotest in Sweden
John Stanich & Ilona Örtengren
   

54-60

A Modified Logochart for Youth
Bianca Z. Hirsch
   

61-63

The Story of a Bestseller
Robert C. Leslie
   

64-66

The Evolution of Noos
Joseph Fabry
   

67-70

The Unemployed Appalachian Miner’s Search for Meaning
Richard W. Greenlee
   

71-75

Meaning and Midlife Crisis: A Logotherapy Approach
Karen V. Harper
   

76-78

Top
   

 

 Volume 13, Number 2, Fall 1990
   

Pages

A Logotherapy and Cognitive Therapy Center in Dallas
Manoochehr Khatami, D. Doke, & R. Boyer
   

83-88

Overcoming the “Tragic Triad”
Elisabeth Lukas
   

89-96

Who Am I? A Journey of Self-Discovery
Phyllis P. Ward
   

97-100

A Case History in Existential Analysis Psychotherapy
Alfried Längle
   

101-106

Relevance of Meaning for the Developmentally Handicapped
Dave Hingsburger
   

107-111

An Example of a Logotherapeutic Doctor-Patient Relationship
Lola Gómez de Pérez Uderzo
   

112-114

Logotherapy and the Vietnam Veteran
Jim Lantz & Richard Greenlee
   

115-118

Life Meaning and the Older Unemployed Worker
John C. Rife
   

119-124

An Experimental Investigation of Viktor Frankl’s Theory of Meaningfulness in Life
A. A. Sappington, John Bryant, & C. Oden
   

125-130

Meaning in Drug Treatment
Kevin W. Olive
   

131-132

Frankl’s Mountain Range Exercise: A Logotherapy Activity for Small Groups
Florence I. Ernzen
   

133-134

Top
   

 

 Volume 14, Number 1, Spring 1991
   

Pages

Logotherapy on Hysteria
Elisabeth Lukas
   

6-10

Multiple Personality Disorder and Logotherapy
R. R. Hutzell, T. Gonzalez-Forestier, & M. Eggert Jerkins
   

11-21

Meaning in Women’s Lives
Mary Alice Nicholson
   

22-25

Logotherapy and the Disabled: A Case Study
Martha K. Stavros
   

26-31

Social Conscience in Logotherapy
Robert E. Massey
   

32-35

Alcoholics Anonymous as Group Logotherapy
Robert M. Holmes
   

36-41

“Stress Management” for Teachers
Bianca Z. Hirsch
   

42-45

Lessons from Two Children
Harald Mori
   

46-49

Self-Transcendence in Marital Therapy
Jim Lantz & Karen Harper
   

50-52

Assisting Caregivers of Alzheimer’s Victims
Joseph Graca & Dale Archer
   

53-57

Top
   

 

Volume 14, Number 2, Fall 1991
   

Pages

Meaning-Centered Family Therapy  Elisabeth Lukas
   

67-74

If Freud Could Talk with Frankl  Joseph Fabry
   

75-81

Logotherapy’s Place for the Ritually Abused  Jennifer Ladd
   

82-86

Conscience in East Germany   Wolfgang Grässler
   

87-91

Coping Strategies in Death Camps   Solveig Cronström-Beskow
   

92-96

The Dynamic of Meaning   Jana Preble
   

97-102

A View of Logotherapy from the Alcohol Field   Marsha J. Koster
   

103-105

The Will to Being or the Will to Meaning   Jim Lantz
   

106-109

Two Poems by Elisabeth Lukas   Translated by Bianca Hirsch
   

110

The Principles of Psychotherapy and Its Relationship to Logotherapy   James C. Crumbaugh
   

111-113

Life Review and Life Preview   Mignon Eisenberg
   

114-116

Top
   

 

Volume 15, Number 1, Spring 1992
   

Pages

The First Published Cases of Paradoxical Intention   Viktor E. Frankl
   

2-6

Logotherapy and the Unconscious Other   Jim Lantz
   

7-9

The Conscience: Individual and Social   Wallace Danforth Joslyn
   

10-12

Logotherapy and 12 Step Programs in the Treatment of Substance Abuse   Terresa M. Wadsworth
   

13-21

A Values Worksheet   Robert R. Hutzell
   

22-29

The Kane Syndrome   Willis C. Finck
   

30-32

Frankl and Jung on Meaning   Thomas J. Peterson
   

33-40

The Meaning Crisis in Russia Today   Dmitry A. Leontiev
   

41-45

Search-For-Meaning Groups for the Homeless   E. Ann Berens
   

46-49

Release from Vows of Marriage   Ann Westermann
   

50-52

Logotherapy and World Politics   Stephen Sam Kalmar
   

53-55

Top
   

 

Volume 15, Number 2, Autumn 1992
   

Pages

Meaning in Industrial Society   Victor E. Frankl
   

66-70

Meaning, Purpose, and Leadership   Robert A. Levit
   

71-75

Suffering in a Nursing Home:  Losses of the Human Spirit   Patricia L. Starck
   

76-79

The Meaning Walk:  A Logotherapy Retreat Experience   Florence I. Ernzen
   

80-82

Lucy’s Story: A Logotherapy Encounter   Ann G. Westermann
   

83-85

Assessing the Logotherapeutic Value of 12-Step Therapy   John M. Majer
   

86-89

Meaning and Goals in the Chronically Ill   Elisabeth Lukas
   

90-98

The Value of Health:  The Current Direction of Health Behavior Research   John E. Stanich
   

99-103

Gratefulness:  A Highway to Meaning?   Patti Havenga Coetzer
   

104-107

Brief Therapy for Sexual Dysfunction   Uwe Eglau
   

108-110

Logotherapy in Child Guidance   Jim Lantz & Karen Harper
   

111-115

Unconscious Religiousness and the Unconscious God   Christoph Kreitmeir
   

116-119

Top
   

 

Volume 16, Number 1, Spring 1993
   

Pages

A Message of Hope   Tom McKillop
   

4-8

Reflections of “Frankl: Life with Meaning”   Robert C. Leslie
   

9-12

The Lifestyle Approach to Substance Abuse   Glenn D. Walters
   

13-19

Meaning and Life’s Trials:  An Avenue of Hope   Patricia E. Haines
   

20-25

The Logoanchor Technique   Ann Graber Westermann
   

26-30

Logotherapy’s Knowledge and Wisdom   Rachel Asagba
   

31-34

The Chinese Purpose-in-Life Test and Psychological Well-Being in Chinese College Students
Daniel T. L. Shek
   

35-42

Meaning Amidst Chaos:  The Challenge of the 21st Century   Grade Kannady
   

43-50

Logotherapeutic Crisis Intervention:  A Case History   Elisabeth Lukas
   

51-54

Top
   

 

Volume 16, Number 2, Autumn 1993
   

Pages

Treatment Modalities in Logotherapy
Jim Lantz
   

65-73

Introducing Clients to Intergenerational Resources
Paul R. Welter
   

74-76

Tools for the Logotherapist:  A Twelve-Step Spiritual Inventory
Howard P. Brown, Jr
   

77-88

Logophilosophy: Compass for an Embattled Education
Bernard R. Dansart
   

89-96

Excessive Gambling—Masking a Frustrated Will to Meaning
Tanja Rutkowski
   

97-102

A Testimony
Charles W. Burton
   

103-104

Logotherapy—Mission for the Future
Ingeborg Van Pelt
   

105-108

Satir and Frankl: Messengers of Hope
Robert Leslie
   

109-112

Top
   

 

Volume 17, Number 1, Spring 1994
   

Pages

The Ecce Homo Technique: A Special Case of Dereflection
James C. Crumbaugh & Rosemary Henrion
   

1-7

The Element of Surprise in the Logotherapeutic Treatment of Adolescents
Paul R. Welter
   

8-13

Franklian Treatment with Traumatized Families
Jim Lantz & Jan Lantz
   

14-19

Finding Meaning in Unavoidable Suffering
Robert C. Barnes
   

20-26

The University Department as a Base for Promoting the Study and Practice of Logotherapy
Kent Esters & Paul Welter
   

27-31

Logotherapy in the Classroom
Robert A. Wilson
   

32-41

Adapting the Life Purpose Questionnaire for Use with Adolescent Populations
Robert R. Hutzell & Willis C. Finck
   

42-46

Logotherory and Logotherapy:  Challenges, Opportunities, and Some Empirical Findings
Gary T. Reker
   

47-55

Top
   

 

Volume 17, Number 2, Autumn 1994
   

Pages

When An Offspring Dies:  Logotherapy in Bereavement Groups
Gustabo Berti & Alicia Schneider Berti
   

65-69

The Meaning of Chronic Headache—The Role of the Human Spirit in Conflict Resolution
Ingeborg van Pelt
   

70-75

Logotherapy: A Journey into Meaning for People with AIDS
Gina Giovinco & Jackie McDougald
   

76-81

Logotherapy in School Crisis Situation
Bianca Z. Hirsch
   

82-86

Uses of Hypnosis in Logotherapy
R. R. Hutzell & Jim Lantz
   

87-92

Self-Transcendence in the Schools
Moseh Addad
   

93-95

Rethinking Logotherapy Training Needs
Grace Kannady
   

96-101

Meaning in Life and Adjustment Amongst Midlife Parents in Hong Kong
Daniel T. L. Shek
   

99-103

Paradoxical Intention:  The Case of Ron
James Yoder
   

108-113

Frankl’s Case of Elfriede G.
Robert C. Leslie
   

114-120

Top
   

 

Volume 18, Number 1, Spring 1995
   

Pages

Correcting the Image
Elisabeth Lukas
   

3-6

Prescription for Survival
Joseph Fabry
   

7-12

Existential Therapy for Chronic Pain
Manoochehr Khatami
   

13-18

Logoanalysis for Future Survival in a Violent Society
Rosemary Henrion
   

19-22

Logotherapy and the Globalization of Industry
Frank E. Humberger
   

23-27

Logotherapy and Religion
Robert C. Leslie
   

28-31

The Application of Logotherapy in Education
Bianca Z. Hirsch
   

32-36

Viktor Frankl Speaks of His Life
Stephen S. Kalmar
   

37-44

Israel Students Live Logotherapy
Mignon Eisenberg
   

45-48

Boundaries and Meaning
William Blair Gould
   

49-52

Logotherapy as Love Therapy
James C. Crum Baugh
   

53-59

The Quest for Meaning in the Twenty-first Century
Jerry L. Long, Jr.
   

60-62

Top
   

 

Volume 18, Number 2, Autumn 1995
   

Pages

Frankl and Marcel:  Two Prophets of Hope for the 21st Century
Jim Lantz
   

65-68

Integrating Logotherapy and Lifestyle Theory:  A Remedy for Criminal Behavior
Glenn D. Walters
   

69-73

Purpose in Life and Self-Perceived Anger Problems among College Students
Andrew  A. Sappington & Patrick J. Kelly
   

74-82

Teaching that Encourages Meaningful Learning
George E. Rice & Rayton R. Sianjina
   

83-86

Meaning-in-the-Workplace as Social Change
Greg Clark
   

87-96

Noetic and Psychic Dimensions in Clinical Practice and Research
John Stanick
   

97-101

Self-Awareness Therapy for Prisoners
Helyn S. Bercovitch
   

102-108

Meaning as A Resource in Marriage Counseling
Paul R. Welter
   

109-113

Crisis Intervention and Logotherapy:  A Case Study
Stephen J. Freeman
   

114-115

Top
   

 

Volume 19, Number 1, Spring 1996
   

Pages

What’s Not in Frankl's Books
Joseph Fabry
   

1-8

Logotherapy Revisited as Love Therapy
James C. Crumbaugh
   

9-14

Coping with Life-Threatening Illnesses Using a Logotherapeutic Approach—Stage I: Health Care Team Interventions
Jared Kass
   

15-19

Stages and Treatment Activities in Family Logotherapy
Jim Lantz
   

20-22

Karen Horney and Viktor Frankl:  Optimists in Spite of Everything
Robert C. Leslie
   

23-28

“A New Course for Management” Revisited
Michael W. Wright
   

29-33

Experiences with Logotherapy:  Nursing the Elderly
Charlotte Stefanics
   

34-38

Meaning Potentials of Burnout in the Helping Professions
Robert Shields
   

41-44

Experiencing Joy and Sorrow:  An Examination of Intensity and Shallowness
Zipora Magen, Menucha Birenbaum, & Dvora Pery
   

45-55

Top
   

 

Volume 19, Number 2, Autumn 1996
   

Pages

Legal Responsibility of Logotherapists
Robin W. Goodenough
   

65-72

Logotherapy in Divorce Counseling:  The Myth of Mr. Wonderful
Pamella Monaghan
   

73-79

An Experimental Investigation of the Relationship between Anger and Altruism
A. A. Sappington, S. Goodwin, & A. Palmatier
   

80-84

Comparison of Logotherapy and Brief Therapy
Bianca Z. Hirsch
   

85-90

The Pursuit of Democracy in Nigeria
Rachel B. Asagba
   

91-94

Logotherapeutic Principles in the Treatment of Panic Attacks with Agoraphobia: A Case History
Richard I. Hooper, Mary K. Walling, & W. D. Joslyn
   

95.99

Logotherapy Training:  The Worthington Model
Jim Lantz
   

100-103

Serving the Summons to A Troubled World
Paul R. Welter
   

104-112

Coping with Life-Threatening Illnesses Using a Logotherapeutic Approach—Stage II:  Clinical Mental Health Counseling
Jared Kass
   

113-118

The Nature of Counseling Relationships fro the Perspective of Logotherapy
Maria Ungar
   

119-121

Top
   

 

Volume 20, Number 1, Spring 1997
   

Pages

Experience with Logotherapy and Existential Analysis in a Hospital for Psychiatry, Psychotherapy, and Neurology
Karl-Dieter Heines
   

4-10

Nurse Structuring of a Logotherapeutic Milieu for Schizophrenic Inpatients
Celia Wintz
   

11-19

Logotherapy in Counselor Education:  Important but Neglected
Kent Estes
   

20-27

Finding Meaning through Frankl’s Socratic Dialogue and Fromm’s Five Needs of the Human Condition:  A Group Process for the School Counseling
Robert A. Wilson
   

28-36

Addiction Recovery:  Transcending the Existential Root of Relapse
Patricia E. Haines
   

37-45

Meaning Levels and Drug-Abuse Therapy:  An Empirical Study
Ma. Angeles Noblejas de la Flor
   

46-52

Top
   

 

Volume 20, Number 2, Autumn 1997
   

Pages

Viktor Frankl 1905-1997
   

65-66

Logophilosophy in the Third Millennium
Joseph Fabry
   

68-76

Teaching Children Peace-Making Skills
Florence I. Ernzen
   

77-79

Conversations with Terminally Ill Patients