Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Dulwich Centre Foundation 9/21/2025, 2025
ISBN 10: 0645838551 ISBN 13: 9780645838558
Da: BargainBookStores, Grand Rapids, MI, U.S.A.
Paperback or Softback. Condizione: New. International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work: 2025 issue 2. Book.
Da: Rarewaves.com USA, London, LONDO, Regno Unito
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Aggiungi al carrelloPaperback. Condizione: New.
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Condizione: New.
Paperback. Condizione: new. Paperback. International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work is a peer-reviewed journal for practitioners who wish to stay in touch with the latest ideas and developments in narrative practice. It is published twice a year on the equinoxes.In this issue: Jack T. C. Chiu and Sharon S. K. Leung's human-canine project in Hong Kong considers what is absent but implicit in the social withdrawal of young people and their preference for animal connections. Sandra Coral draws on critical race theory to bring attention to the Eurocentric leanings in therapy spaces, which often leave Black neurodivergent people unsafe. Narrative therapy can help us to create "pockets of freedom" - spaces free from the dominant culture's interpretations and judgements - as sites of refuge and resistance, responding to the alienation imposed by colonial legacies.Stephanie Badman's work demonstrates this in the realm of genetic counselling, where the medicalised understandings often privilege professional knowledge over lived experience. Through letter writing, which elevates people's own local knowledges, narrative practice creates space for witnessing and re-witnessing preferred identities.Christine Dennstedt takes us into the liminal encounters of psychedelic-assisted therapy and draws on the narrative practice metaphor of migration of identity to loosen entrenched problem stories and allow new meanings to take shape. She also examines our ethical accountability when engaging with practices linked to Indigenous knowledges, and the need for humility, integrity and a commitment to avoiding cultural appropriation.Directing a narrative feminist lens on bulimia and abuse, Kassandra Pedersen proposes an alternative fluid language for bulimia, using the metaphor of tides. She offers a nuanced, justice-informed approach that avoids replicating neoliberal discourses on food and body management, in which the body is seen as a passive recipient of trauma. Instead, Kassandra invites us to respect the body's capacity to notice, disagree and bear witness.In a deeply moving contribution, Tanya Newman shares the voices of dying mothers who write letters for their children. These letters are not only acts of love but also portals to future re-membering, enabling both mothers and children to resist single-storied descriptions of loss. Through "linking lives", mothers leave behind an archive of care, preferred identities, and their unfinished yet enduring work of raising children.Tarang Kaur turns our attention to neurodivergent children, whose skills, values and acts of resistance are too often pathologised by deficit-based discourses and disregarded in the name of treatment. Through living documents, we are invited to witness children as keen collaborators and bearers of unique insider knowledge. What is dismissed as "problematic behaviour" can be seen as a child's creative response and skilful reclaiming of agency. A peer-reviewed journal for practitioners who wish to stay in touch with the latest ideas and developments in narrative therapy and community work. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability.
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Aggiungi al carrelloPAP. Condizione: New. New Book. Delivered from our UK warehouse in 4 to 14 business days. THIS BOOK IS PRINTED ON DEMAND. Established seller since 2000.
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Da: Biblios, Frankfurt am main, HESSE, Germania
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Da: Biblios, Frankfurt am main, HESSE, Germania
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EUR 22,78
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Aggiungi al carrelloPaperback. Condizione: new. Paperback. International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work is a peer-reviewed journal for practitioners who wish to stay in touch with the latest ideas and developments in narrative practice. It is published twice a year on the equinoxes.In this issue: Jack T. C. Chiu and Sharon S. K. Leung's human-canine project in Hong Kong considers what is absent but implicit in the social withdrawal of young people and their preference for animal connections. Sandra Coral draws on critical race theory to bring attention to the Eurocentric leanings in therapy spaces, which often leave Black neurodivergent people unsafe. Narrative therapy can help us to create "pockets of freedom" - spaces free from the dominant culture's interpretations and judgements - as sites of refuge and resistance, responding to the alienation imposed by colonial legacies.Stephanie Badman's work demonstrates this in the realm of genetic counselling, where the medicalised understandings often privilege professional knowledge over lived experience. Through letter writing, which elevates people's own local knowledges, narrative practice creates space for witnessing and re-witnessing preferred identities.Christine Dennstedt takes us into the liminal encounters of psychedelic-assisted therapy and draws on the narrative practice metaphor of migration of identity to loosen entrenched problem stories and allow new meanings to take shape. She also examines our ethical accountability when engaging with practices linked to Indigenous knowledges, and the need for humility, integrity and a commitment to avoiding cultural appropriation.Directing a narrative feminist lens on bulimia and abuse, Kassandra Pedersen proposes an alternative fluid language for bulimia, using the metaphor of tides. She offers a nuanced, justice-informed approach that avoids replicating neoliberal discourses on food and body management, in which the body is seen as a passive recipient of trauma. Instead, Kassandra invites us to respect the body's capacity to notice, disagree and bear witness.In a deeply moving contribution, Tanya Newman shares the voices of dying mothers who write letters for their children. These letters are not only acts of love but also portals to future re-membering, enabling both mothers and children to resist single-storied descriptions of loss. Through "linking lives", mothers leave behind an archive of care, preferred identities, and their unfinished yet enduring work of raising children.Tarang Kaur turns our attention to neurodivergent children, whose skills, values and acts of resistance are too often pathologised by deficit-based discourses and disregarded in the name of treatment. Through living documents, we are invited to witness children as keen collaborators and bearers of unique insider knowledge. What is dismissed as "problematic behaviour" can be seen as a child's creative response and skilful reclaiming of agency. A peer-reviewed journal for practitioners who wish to stay in touch with the latest ideas and developments in narrative therapy and community work. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability.
Da: CitiRetail, Stevenage, Regno Unito
EUR 17,25
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPaperback. Condizione: new. Paperback. International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work is a peer-reviewed journal for practitioners who wish to stay in touch with the latest ideas and developments in narrative practice. It is published twice a year on the equinoxes.In this issue: Jack T. C. Chiu and Sharon S. K. Leung's human-canine project in Hong Kong considers what is absent but implicit in the social withdrawal of young people and their preference for animal connections. Sandra Coral draws on critical race theory to bring attention to the Eurocentric leanings in therapy spaces, which often leave Black neurodivergent people unsafe. Narrative therapy can help us to create "pockets of freedom" - spaces free from the dominant culture's interpretations and judgements - as sites of refuge and resistance, responding to the alienation imposed by colonial legacies.Stephanie Badman's work demonstrates this in the realm of genetic counselling, where the medicalised understandings often privilege professional knowledge over lived experience. Through letter writing, which elevates people's own local knowledges, narrative practice creates space for witnessing and re-witnessing preferred identities.Christine Dennstedt takes us into the liminal encounters of psychedelic-assisted therapy and draws on the narrative practice metaphor of migration of identity to loosen entrenched problem stories and allow new meanings to take shape. She also examines our ethical accountability when engaging with practices linked to Indigenous knowledges, and the need for humility, integrity and a commitment to avoiding cultural appropriation.Directing a narrative feminist lens on bulimia and abuse, Kassandra Pedersen proposes an alternative fluid language for bulimia, using the metaphor of tides. She offers a nuanced, justice-informed approach that avoids replicating neoliberal discourses on food and body management, in which the body is seen as a passive recipient of trauma. Instead, Kassandra invites us to respect the body's capacity to notice, disagree and bear witness.In a deeply moving contribution, Tanya Newman shares the voices of dying mothers who write letters for their children. These letters are not only acts of love but also portals to future re-membering, enabling both mothers and children to resist single-storied descriptions of loss. Through "linking lives", mothers leave behind an archive of care, preferred identities, and their unfinished yet enduring work of raising children.Tarang Kaur turns our attention to neurodivergent children, whose skills, values and acts of resistance are too often pathologised by deficit-based discourses and disregarded in the name of treatment. Through living documents, we are invited to witness children as keen collaborators and bearers of unique insider knowledge. What is dismissed as "problematic behaviour" can be seen as a child's creative response and skilful reclaiming of agency. A peer-reviewed journal for practitioners who wish to stay in touch with the latest ideas and developments in narrative therapy and community work. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability.
Da: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Germania
EUR 18,18
Quantità: 2 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloTaschenbuch. Condizione: Neu. nach der Bestellung gedruckt Neuware - Printed after ordering - International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work is a peer-reviewed journal for practitioners who wish to stay in touch with the latest ideas and developments in narrative practice. It is published twice a year on the equinoxes.In this issue:Jack T. C. Chiu and Sharon S. K. Leung's human-canine project in Hong Kong considers what is absent but implicit in the social withdrawal of young people and their preference for animal connections.Sandra Coral draws on critical race theory to bring attention to the Eurocentric leanings in therapy spaces, which often leave Black neurodivergent people unsafe. Narrative therapy can help us to create 'pockets of freedom' - spaces free from the dominant culture's interpretations and judgements - as sites of refuge and resistance, responding to the alienation imposed by colonial legacies.Stephanie Badman's work demonstrates this in the realm of genetic counselling, where the medicalised understandings often privilege professional knowledge over lived experience. Through letter writing, which elevates people's own local knowledges, narrative practice creates space for witnessing and re-witnessing preferred identities.Christine Dennstedt takes us into the liminal encounters of psychedelic-assisted therapy and draws on the narrative practice metaphor of migration of identity to loosen entrenched problem stories and allow new meanings to take shape. She also examines our ethical accountability when engaging with practices linked to Indigenous knowledges, and the need for humility, integrity and a commitment to avoiding cultural appropriation.Directing a narrative feminist lens on bulimia and abuse, Kassandra Pedersen proposes an alternative fluid language for bulimia, using the metaphor of tides. She offers a nuanced, justice-informed approach that avoids replicating neoliberal discourses on food and body management, in which the body is seen as a passive recipient of trauma. Instead, Kassandra invites us to respect the body's capacity to notice, disagree and bear witness.In a deeply moving contribution, Tanya Newman shares the voices of dying mothers who write letters for their children. These letters are not only acts of love but also portals to future re-membering, enabling both mothers and children to resist single-storied descriptions of loss. Through 'linking lives', mothers leave behind an archive of care, preferred identities, and their unfinished yet enduring work of raising children.Tarang Kaur turns our attention to neurodivergent children, whose skills, values and acts of resistance are too often pathologised by deficit-based discourses and disregarded in the name of treatment. Through living documents, we are invited to witness children as keen collaborators and bearers of unique insider knowledge. What is dismissed as 'problematic behaviour' can be seen as a child's creative response and skilful reclaiming of agency.
Da: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Germania
EUR 21,14
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloTaschenbuch. Condizione: Neu. nach der Bestellung gedruckt Neuware - Printed after ordering - International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work is a peer-reviewed journal for practitioners who wish to stay in touch with the latest ideas and developments in narrative practice. It is published twice a year on the equinoxes.In honour of the 20th anniversary of the Tree of Life, this issue includes a special section on metaphoric practice. The Tree of Life narrative approach has travelled way beyond its original contexts in Southern Africa. Practitioners in communities across the globe have adapted and expanded this metaphor, finding ways to gather stories of survival, kinship and hope in the face of storms.Across many parts of our world, people are living through ravaging storms of appalling war crimes and growing violence. Colonisation, neoliberal economic discourses, political denial, historical silences and poverty have led to immense suffering.And yet these storms do not tell the whole story. People are not passive recipients of hardships, and they are always responding. It is heartening to witness the innovative ways practitioners are adapting narrative therapy ideas and rooting them in diverse soils across the world. Their practices honour people's knowledge and skills, acknowledge acts of refusal and resistance, invite agency and enable contribution. Across the work in this issue, therapy and community practice are understood not simply as sites of individual change but also as places where social and political change can be fostered.We hope these contributions offer moments of resonance and curiosity, and spark innovative adaptations in your context. In times when many communities continue to face devastating storms, the stories and narrative practices documented here remind us of the power of collective action and of our commitment to continue building strong forests.