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 53
... is a testament to the individuals involved and to the value of the work that this project is still continuing today. I visited the project on the day I heard I Notes 1 www.lapidus.org.uk 2 We might say that 'writing in FOREWORD 11.
... individuals have always written – whether or not for publication – out of their own experiences of illness, distress, care or institutionalisation.7 This writing individual seems to be the point at which any survey of the field of ...
... individual experience. At its most polarised, this might even read as a debate between provider-led and user-led accounts of the work. (In Chapter Five, for example, it is Sam Moran, the project member, who writes about the poetry ...
... individual experience; 2. systems of provision, from the bureaucratic to the clinical; 3. the vulnerability of the human individual, who in this case is receiving care. One of the most obvious things about these three ingredients is the ...
... individual example of practice comes from a specific care area. Inger Eriksson, a Hospital Chaplain from Lund, writes about a long-term poetry reading project in a Swedish hospice. To work in hospice means to work within a specific set ...
Contenido
Thinking Through Practice | 117 |
The Contributors | 228 |
Useful Addresses | 231 |
Subject Index | 232 |
Author Index | 239 |