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Showing 1 - 5 of 5 matches in All Departments
All human cultures across time have created rituals, bringing family members together to celebrate, welcome, honor, or mourn. While contemporary rituals still exist to serve these important functions, we often perform them automatically, without considering their vital roles in our lives. Many individuals feel alienated from the rituals of their childhoods, while others are struggling to create satisfying new traditions that reflect their own present needs and circumstances. Authors Evan Imber-Black and Janine Roberts show how we can learn to tap the power of rituals to mark transitions, express important values, heal the past, and deepen relationships. Each chapter looks at the special issues and possibilities for nuclear, extended, single-parent, and remarried families, as well as for single adults and couples. The authors also pay particular attention to how changing gender roles are reflected in our rituals, and how revitalized traditions can actually alter the course of intimate relationships. Filled with first-person stories and practical examples, this book will help all readers enhance the meaning of traditions old and new, reinforcing and celebrating life's many milestones and ties.
Secrets come in all shapes and sizes. And for families as well as individuals, they are built on a complex web of shifting motives and emotions. But today, when personal revelations are posted on the Internet or sensationalized on afternoon talk shows, we risk losing touch with how important secrets are -- how they are used and abused, their power to harm and heal. In this important work, Evan Imber-Black explores the nature of
secrets, helping us understand: Filled with moving first-person stories, The Secret Life of Families provides perspective on some of today's most sensitive personal and social issues. Giving voice to our deepest fears and to our power to overcome them, this is a book that will be talked about for years to come.
If individuals cannot adequately be understood without reference to
the family system, families themselves are comprehensible only in a
broader social context. FAMILIES AND LARGER SYSTEMS is the first
single-author book on families and larger systems designed
specifically for the practicing therapist. It offers rich
descriptions of the difficulties families and larger systems often
pose for one another; presents a detailed assessment model for
therapists; and provides a careful interviewing format as well as
directions for designing creative interventions. Imber-Black offers
a consultation model for dealing with families and larger systems
who have become embroiled with one another, and methods for longer
term work with those families who must engage with larger systems
across significant portions of their life cycle, due to illness,
handicaps, or poverty. Problems of labeling, stigma, and secrecy in
families are addressed, and an entire chapter is devoted to women's
issues in families and related systems.
This book uses rich case material to show how normative family rituals can be identified and used as the basis for therapeutic rituals. Throughout the perspective is both consistent and positive. The editors and contributors assume that families are resourceful and can become partners in coevolving metaphorical rituals that suit their unique histories and needs.
Daily rituals, holiday traditions, and rites of passage mark our time, create unforgettable memories, and define us as individuals, family members, and community participants. Rituals in Families and Family Therapy, Revised Edition, builds on the rich case material of the first edition and develops the editors' powerful therapeutic approach that identifies normative family rituals as the basis for effective therapeutic rituals. With new chapters on such topics as rituals and bicultural couples, illness and ritual, and rituals in the wake of September 11, 2001, the Revised Edition both revisits and rejuvenates the landmark work of Imber-Black, Roberts, and Whiting.
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