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
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... illness, distress, care or institutionalisation.7 This writing individual seems to be the point at which any survey of the field of creative writing in health and social care will sooner or later arrive. On the one hand, there are the ...
... illness or care, it is informed by and acknowledges a continuum with those experiences.9 In her Foreword, Christina Patterson discusses the importance of remembering to think about writing itself as the goal of writing activities: about ...
... illness and distress and those of people receiving health care. Freely develops these to suggest some principles for supporting writing participants, whether of university courses or hospital projects. Her personal, writerly approach is ...
... illness, the individual's experience of and reactions to illness and treatment, treatment defined as care, intervention or some form of institutionalisation. 3 Celia Hunt (1999); Fiona Sampson (2001); Inger Eriksson's current doctoral ...
... illness (Carver 1990, Gunn 1992, Gross 1999, Kay 1998, MacSweeney 1997, Wicks 1994). This is not so strongly the case in countries such as Finland where, for example, the poet and novelist Eira Stenberg produced a TV play with people ...
Contenido
Thinking Through Practice | 117 |
The Contributors | 228 |
Useful Addresses | 231 |
Subject Index | 232 |
Author Index | 239 |