Brief therapy is a postmodern treatment mode that treats
problems as social constructions, encouraging those seeking
treatment to replace personal troubles (negative stories) with new
problem-solving skills (positive stories). The significant
differences discussed in this book do not involve sociologists and
brief therapists. The differences are between brief therapists, on
the one hand, and practitioners of psychotherapy and family therapy
on the other. One indicator of these is brief therapists'
describing the people who seek their services as clients. The
terminology may be contrasted with the language of patients used by
many other therapists. At the very least, this difference suggests
how brief therapy departs from therapy approaches that are based on
the medical model.
Becoming Miracle Workers takes the reader inside "Northland
Clinic," one of the most innovative and important centers of brief
therapy in the world. Based on twelve years of research, Miller's
book discusses how brief therapy has evolved into its present,
postmodern form. He describes the details of brief therapist-client
interactions, and the behind-the-scenes discussions among brief
therapists about their clients' problems. This readable account of
the workings of brief therapy invites readers to sit in on brief
therapy sessions, provides them with new understandings of personal
troubles as social constructions, and shows how brief therapists
help their clients develop new, untroubled, life stories.
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