Creative Writing in Health and Social CareJessica Kingsley Publishers, 2004 M03 15 - 240 páginas This book is really a must-have for therapists and others in the creative arts, so that you can see how the workings of the human mind can be displayed through the arts. Even with serious illness, the mind can talk. And that is the point of the book'. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 21
... Clinicians Robin Downie, University of Glasgow Chapter 7 Fragile Space: Therapeutic Relationship and the Word Rose Flint, freelance practitioner Chapter 8 Writing and Reflexivity: Training to Facilitate Writing for Personal Development ...
... clinician, service user, researcher. On the other hand, there is writing as the repository of an individual's way of going on in one or more of the following ways: · a celebration of individual voice, character and identity; · 13 ...
... clinician may not automatically agree that an arts practice is a good thing, nor that it is relevant to the care context. An arts professional may be wary of an arts practice which seems to talk about itself in any terms except the ...
... Clinicians and arts managers understand little of each other's approaches; full-time writers may not 'speak the same language as' either psychotherapists or social workers. There is, however, another way to think about this complexity ...
... clinicians examines some aims which might justify the inclusion of creative writing and reading in the health care curriculum. He argues for several groups of 'transferable skills': these include 'humanistic perspective' and 'self ...
Contenido
Thinking Through Practice | 117 |
The Contributors | 228 |
Useful Addresses | 231 |
Subject Index | 232 |
Author Index | 239 |