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A copy of the original ad for What Do You Say After You Say Hello? From the NY Times Book Review, August 1972 |
This book is considered by many to be Eric Berne's sequel to Games People Play. Although Berne published other books since Games was released in 1964, most of those works were oriented towards those trained in psychotherapy and not towards the individuals who made Games People Play a two-year bestseller. In What Do You Say After You Say Hello? Berne presents a summary of Transactional Analysis, introducing (or to many, re-introducing) structural analysis, ego states, rituals, pastimes, and games. Berne then introduces the concept of Scripts to the mainstream world audience for the first time. As Berne and his followers began refining Transactional Analysis since its formal introduction in 1958, Berne began developing many new ideas, such as Scripts. This was the first "mainstream" book in which the idea of scripts was introduced. In What Do You Say After You Say Hello, Berne approaches scripts chronologically. He shows how parental programming will lay the basis for the script in the "plastic years" of childhood and how adolescent rebellion may lead to an "anti-script." Berne then goes on to analyze the scripts of many familiar fairy tales, such as Cinderella and Little Red Riding Hood. |
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Berne then goes on to introduce what he calls the script-breakers. A script-breaker is Berne's remedy to parental programming. With these tools, one is able to break out of a script entirely and change your destiny. Lastly, Berne presents objectively and fairly some objections and criticisms to script theory. |
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The following is an interesting review of What Do You Say After You Say Hello |
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Eric Berne was a
psychoanalyst who became well known in the 1970s for his system of
"transactional analysis", the transactions in question being mostly those
between a young child and its parents. He proposed various structures for
this relationship based on the roles parent/adult/child that every person
plays and presents life stories as scripts that can be good or bad. |
A copy of another advertisement for What Do You Say After You Say Hello? This appeared in the NY Times Book Review in June, 1972 |
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Berne's bad luck was that he wrote the book in 1970 when psychology was going through a bad patch with a flood of bizarre systems appearing. The good gets lost with the bad and T.A. now tends to be labelled as an outmoded California fashion related to Freudianism. It's good to see that
Berne arrives at his system empirically with his basic framework being
bolstered with all the evidence he can find. He examines accents, voices,
vocabulary, types of laughter, names, in fact anything he can lay his
hands on to provide effective cross checks to his main structural
analysis . |
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For additional information on all of Dr. Berne's works, refer to his bibliography. For information on Games People Play by Dr. Berne, refer to this page. |
Many of Eric Berne's books are available at Amazon.com. To order a copy of What Do You Say After You Say Hello? click here. |
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Hamblamos espanol. Site last updated on 2 July, 2006 in New York, USA.
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