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Books by Robert W. Rieber

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  • by Robert W. Rieber & Harold J. Vetter
    £93.99

    In this text, the authors review the last twenty-five years of progress in research and theory on language and communication in the psychopathological context. They also identify promising avenues for future research. This text will benefit students taking courses in psycholinguistics.

  • - Psychopathy in Everyday Life
    by Robert W. Rieber
    £93.99

    Toward the Psychology of Malefaction This is a book about human wickedness. This view is often expressed in a paradigm that regards human conduct as the "dependent variable," while anything that impinges on the human being is considered the "independent variable."

  • by Robert W. Rieber & Robert J. Kelly
    £47.99

    This book demonstrates how social distress or anxiety is reflected, modified, and evolves through movies. It shows how film is a perfect medium for generating and projecting dreams, fantasies, and nightmares, on the individual as well as the societal level.

  • - The History and Theory of Dissociation and Its Disorders
    by Robert W. Rieber
    £93.99 - 104.49

    This book uses case history methodology to illustrate the relationship between theory and practice of the study of Dissociation Identity Disorder (DID). The book traces the clinical and social history of dissociation in a provocative examination of this phenomenon.

  • by Robert W. Rieber & Harold J. Vetter
    £134.99

    In this text, the authors review the last twenty-five years of progress in research and theory on language and communication in the psychopathological context. They also identify promising avenues for future research. This text will benefit students taking courses in psycholinguistics.

  • - Psychopathy in Everyday Life
    by Robert W. Rieber
    £93.99

    Toward the Psychology of Malefaction This is a book about human wickedness. This view is often expressed in a paradigm that regards human conduct as the "dependent variable," while anything that impinges on the human being is considered the "independent variable."

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