Deconstructing PsychotherapyIan Parker SAGE, 1999 M03 30 - 208 páginas `I enjoyed this book, and think that it should find a grateful and attentive readership in the practical field as well as being a central text in academic settings. It will also be well received by those, like myself, for whom the interest is more in deconstructing than psychotherapy′ - Dialogues This book takes the discursive and postmodern turn in psychotherapy a significant step forward and will be of interest to all those working in mental health who are concerned with challenges to oppression and processes of emancipation. It achieves this by: reflecting on the role of psychotherapy in contemporary culture; developing critiques of language in psychotherapy that unravel its claims to personal truth; and the reworking of a place in the transformative therapeutic practice. Deconstruction is brought to bear on the key conceptual and pragmatic issues that therapists and clinical psychologists face, and the project of therapy is opened up to critical attention and reconstruction. The book provides clear reviews of different viewpoints and will help readers to understand the complex terrain of debates. |
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... person in its grip. And against this it is always possible to find another narrative which takes up a perspective which flows from the standpoint of the person who is always trying to find ways of shaking the problem and perhaps ...
... person's identity and to work with people as 'agents of their own lives'. Stephen Madigan also traces a narrative of agency in his account of the transition of a client in a difficult and pathologizing medical environment from being a ...
... person as sinister organs of state control, clandestinely hegemonic, colonizing and reproductive of inequitable power relations. Psychotherapy as a Normalizing Practice Most psychotherapeutic practices both treat the individual as the ...
... person in the light of the premises themselves. It implies a form of interested inquiry which holds the premises open for exploration. In this way neither participant in the therapeutic dialogue is bound by the consultee's dominant ...
... person in the subject position of patient or client implicitly locates the problem within the person thereby potentially attributing ownership of the problem to him or her. This can encourage interiorization of the problem thereby ...
Contenido
1 | |
19 | |
Chapter 3 Derrida and the Deconstruction of Power as Context and Topic in Therapy | 39 |
Foucault and the Politics of Psychotherapy | 54 |
Postmodernism as a Context for Critical Therapeutic Work | 71 |
Fragments from the Fifth Province | 86 |
Part II Deconstruction in Practice | 103 |
Chapter 8 A Discursive Approach to Therapy with Men | 115 |
Chapter 9 Therapy and Faith | 132 |
Chapter 10 Inscription Description and Deciphering Chronic Identities | 150 |
Part III Deconstructing Psychotherapeutic Discourse | 164 |
Chapter 12 Can and Should We Know How Where and When Psychotherapy Takes Place? | 175 |
Index | 189 |