The Routledge International Handbook of Postmodern Therapies includes contributions by leading international experts to provide an invaluable resource and reference for therapy students, scholars, educators, and practitioners.
Along with discussing key postmodern approaches, including collaborative-dialogic, narrative, solution focused, and open dialogue, the handbook features advances in theory, research, and applications of postmodern practice. It covers both critical perspectives and methodologies, such as narrative, poststructuralist, performative, and post qualitative. Considerations of issues of diversity, power and privilege are infused throughout the handbook.
This handbook is essential for practitioners and students interested in teaching, using, and researching postmodern practice, including counsellors, clinical psychologists, family therapists, psychotherapists, and social workers.
The Routledge International Handbook of Postmodern Therapies includes contributions by leading international experts to provide an invaluable resource and reference for therapy students, scholars, educators, and practitioners.
Recenzijos
The Routledge International Handbook of Postmodern Therapies offers an exciting, much needed, in-depth exploration of postmodern thought and its impact on therapeutic approaches, research, and education. Established and emerging leaders provide multiple perspectives across contexts, creating an invigorating, complex, yet accessible discussion, moving in and out of theoretical and practical considerations. This book provides foundational insights and is a must read for anyone seeking to better understand and broaden their ability to work from postmodern approaches! Teresa McDowell, EdD, professor emerita, Lewis & Clark College, co-author of Socioculturally Attuned Family Therapy: Guidelines for Equitable Theory and Practice
How fortunate are we to have within one book the wide and diverse range of papers that go under the rubric of postmodern therapies. There is nothing quite like this!
David Epston, co-originator with Michael White of Narrative Therapy
The Routledge International Handbook of Postmodern Therapies remaps the landscape of postmodern therapies, making it an essential resource for contemporary practitioners, researchers, and educators. Top scholars from around the globe share how they have successfully used postmodern theories and practices to bringer greater humanity and justice to psychotherapy and beyond. Readers will find that each chapter enables them to envision fresh and liberating ways to advance their professional and personal development.
Diane R. Gehart, PhD, Therapy that Works Institute, California State University, Northridge
Written by the top thinkers and clinicians in the field of postmodern therapies, this is an excellent resource for teaching, research and clinical practice.
Prof. dr. Peter Rober, KU Leuven (Belgium)
PART I
Introduction to postmodern therapies
1 We have always been postmodern: A new past for a future postmodern
psychotherapy
Paul Stenner and Maria Nichterlein
2 Theoretical underpinnings of therapeutic practice after modernism
Kenneth Gergen and Sheila McNamee
3 What can postmodern therapies learn from dang-ki healing about the cultural
ontology of the self?
Boon-Ooi Lee
4 Happiness at work in the context of growing precariousness and labor
instability
Edgar Cabanas and Daniel Nehring
5 Postmodernism, decolonial critiques, and liberatory praxis
Rhea Almeida and J. Corey Williams
6 Publishing and postmodern therapy: Delphi responses from the editors of
five family therapy journals
Jim Duvall, Glenn Larner, Jay Lebow, Philip Messent, and Rachel Tambling
With after reflections from Harlene Anderson and Del Loewenthal
PART II
Key postmodern approaches
7 Collaborative-dialogic practice
Harlene Anderson
8 Narrative therapy
Tom Stone Carlson and Sanni Paljakka
9 Solution focused brief therapy
Peter De Jong, Jennifer Gerwing, and Sara Healing
10 The reflecting team
Anna Sidis
11 Open dialogue
Tomi Bergström, Mia Kurtti, Andrew Duthie, Kari Valtanen, and Jaakko Seikkula
12 Socio-emotional relationship therapy
Carmen Knudson-Martin
13 Bringforthist therapy
Karl Tomm, Faye Gosnell, Emily Doyle, Marc Ross, and Joaquķn Gaete-Silva
14 Systemic-dialogical therapy
Paolo Bertrando and Claudia Lini
15 Social therapy and social therapeutics Lois Holzman
16 Post-existential therapy
Simon Wharne
17 Pluralistic therapy
Christine Kupfer and John McLeod
18 Integrative systemic therapy
Lennart Lorås and Kristoffer J. Whittaker
19 Integrative community therapy
Marilene Grandesso and Emerson F. Rasera
PART III
Socio-cultural context
20 Re-worlding therapys narrative: A demodern and decolonial reconstitution
of healing
marcela polanco, Christian Beraud Fernįndez, Carlos Chico Ramos, Elizabeth
Barajas, Nihan Eryonucu, Ingrid Guerrieri, and Yasmine Willis Fernandez
21 Structures of feeling in gender, bodies, and technology
Sarah Riley and Adrienne Evans
22 Systemic racism and the differential racializations of Black and non-Black
people of color in white space
William Ming Liu and Rossina Zamora Liu
23 The deconstruction of monologic spaces: When white meta-narrativity
silences
George Yancy
24 Queering therapeutic conversations: More than affirmative and not just
for queers
Julie Tilsen, Kristen E. Benson, and David Nylund
25 Cripping and thickening therapy: Making space for bodymind difference
Meredith Bessey, Elisabeth Harrison, Sonia Meerai, Kaley Roosen, Allison
Taylor, and Carla Rice
26 Postmodern therapies in a neoliberal world
Gene Combs and Jill Freedman
27 Therapeutic practice as transmaterial worlding
Leah Salter and Gail Simon
PART IV
Research
28 Methodological foundations and innovations in postmodern therapy research
Ronald J. Chenail, Dan Wulff, Sally St. George, and Dragana Ilic
29 Using narrative inquiry and qualitative research to support postmodern
psychotherapy practice
John McLeod
30 Professional development for counselors, psychologists, and therapists by
using Reflective Interventionist Conversation Analysis
Michelle OReilly, Nikki Kiyimba, and Jessica Lester
31 Poststructuralism: A preface to post qualitative inquiry
Elizabeth A. St.Pierre
32 Contributions of dialogical self theory to psychotherapy theory, research
and practice
Miguel M. Gonēalves, Hubert H. J. M. Hermans, Joćo Batista, and Joćo T.
Oliveira
33 If its all socially constructed, how do we do research? Powering together
in action research for transformations
Hilary Bradbury
34 Performative social science: Linking art, science, and society
Günter Mey and Rainer Winter
PART V
Education and training
35 Clinical supervision: Making products or a profession?
Joaquķn Gaete-Silva, Jeff Chang, and Inés Sametband
36 Pedagogy for practitioners: Post-oppositional teaching tactics for
transformation
Eileen Chung and AnaLouise Keating
37 Training and supervision of psychotherapists with the focus on dialogical
skills: The Finnish case
Aarno Laitila, Pekka Borchers, Ilpo Kuhlman, and Eija-Liisa Rautiainen
38 Postmodern pedagogy and the ongoing development of teaching and sustaining
skills of critical reflection on practice
Laura Béres, Stephanie L. Baird, Jane E. Sanders, and Rosemary Vito
39 Indigenizing the classroom: Bringing critical kinship to family studies
Sarina Perchak, Andrea V. Breen, and Kim Anderson
PART VI
Applications
40 The witness to witness program: Evolving curricula to serve social justice
principles
Kaethe Weingarten, Pamela Secada-Sayles, and Jessica Calderón
41 Listening: An everyday expectation
Dan Wulff and Sally St. George
42 Grief therapy as meaning reconstruction: From symptoms to significance
Robert A. Neimeyer and Carolyn Ng
43 Co-creating public values
Dina von Heimburg, Ottar Ness, Jacob Storch, and Tom Strong
44 The justness of collaborative-dialogic practices in child protection
Rocķo Chaveste, Khadija Al-Sarhi, Henrike van der Hoeven, Anne Vijverberg,
and Otto Sestak
45 Re-centering silenced disaster trauma and healing in neoliberal context:
Integrating social constructionist and decolonization approaches
Kumar Ravi Priya, Shilpi Kukreja, and Neha Jain
46 Imbeleko approach to counseling: Developing culturally resonant talking
therapy services
Ncazelo Ncube-Mlilo
47 Empowering families and networks struggling with substance use and
addictions through an open dialogue approach
Pavel Nepustil and Tanya Mudry
Olga Smoliak, PhD, C. Psych, RMFT, is a professor of Family Relations and Applied Nutrition at the University of Guelph, Canada. She is interested in advancing critical and discursive perspectives and inquiry in counselling/psychotherapy and family therapy.
Eleftheria Tseliou, PhD, is professor of Research Methodology and Qualitative Methods at the University of Thessaly (Greece) and a systemic therapist. She is also president of the Association of European Qualitative Researchers in Psychology (EQuiP). She is interested in discursive qualitative methodologies and systemic/postmodern, and counseling/psychotherapy process research.
Tom Strong, PhD, is a professor and counsellor-educator who recently retired from the University of Calgary. He writes on the collaborative, critical, and practical potentials of discursive approaches to psychotherapy.
Saliha Bava, PhD, LMFT is program director and professor of marriage and family therapy at Mercy University, NY. She is the co-founding Board member of the International Certificate Program in Collaborative-Dialogic Practices (ICCP) and Board member of Taos Institute. Her scholarship and consultation focus on critical discursive change practices in psychotherapy, educational, organizational and social context.
Peter Muntigl, is a staff scientist in the Department of Translation, Interpreting and Communication at Ghent University (Belgium) and an adjunct professor in the Faculty of Education at Simon Fraser University (Canada). His recent publications include Interaction in Psychotherapy (2024, Cambridge University Press).