Narrative approaches in social work practice : a life span, culturally centered, strengths perspective /
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Author / Creator: | Freeman, Edith M. |
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Imprint: | Springfield, Ill. : Charles C. Thomas, ©2011. |
Description: | 1 online resource (xv, 244 pages) : illustrations |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | E-Resource Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11278760 |
Table of Contents:
- Observing and analyzing how clients' narratives emerge over the life course: the narrative knowledge, timing, and context principle
- Listening to clients' spontaneous narratives: the shared experience and transformation principle
- Responding to clients' spontaneous narratives: the naming and unpacking assessment and intervention principle
- Using narative questions to connect clients' single event narratives and life narratives: the meaning-making principle
- Helping marginalized clients to share and advocate for their narrated and unnarrated experiences: the social justice-systems change intervention principle
- Using play, interpretive, and improvisational narrative strategies with children: prevention, early intervention, and treatment
- Assisting youths in exploring choices and consequencs at critical moments through their life stories and transition naratives
- Helping clients to reauthor challenging narratives about gender and other adult development issues
- Facilitating older adults' use of life narratives for personal well-being, peer support, and mentoring
- Helping families and couples to manage conflicts through resolution-based metaphors and other narrative rituals
- Utilizing common marginalized and exception narratives with multiple client systems to facilitate individual and structural changges
- Lessons learned and future directions for narrative practice.