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This long-awaited book is the first to offer a complete and clear
presentation of the therapy of the Milan Associates, Luigi Boscolo
and Gianfranco Cecchin. Based on cybernetic theory, their work has
had dramatic success in helping families change behaviour. This
practical and enlightening book uses clinical cases and the
fascinating conversations among the four authors to examine the
relationship between Milan theory and practice.Transcripts of
sessions conducted by Boscolo and Cecchin,which include a family
that is hiding a history of incest and one dominated by an
anorectic girl,provide vivid examples of family interaction and
therapeutic imagination. In the accompanying conversations with
Boscolo and Cecchin about these sessions, Hoffman and Penn take us
behind the scenes to show how the therapists think through and
conduct their therapy. These highly readable conversations clarify
the essentials of the therapy, including hypothesizing, circular
questioning, positive connotation, and crafting interventions. Like
Milan therapy itself, the interviews are recursive new ideas about
the therapy feed back into the conversations and stimulate further
revelations. A lengthy introduction sets the Milan approach in
historical context, and introductions to the individual cases
highlight the main ideas.
Irreverence: A strategy for Therapists' Survival marks the end
result of a collaboration between the creative and highly respected
therapists and writers in the family therapy field. It continues
the tradition of the Milan group and later systemic thinkers to
examine the way a therapist's own thinking can block the process of
therapy an
Two central ideas have become part of the orthodoxy of modern
family therapy thinking. The first is that the therapist is part of
the system he or she observes, and the second is that the therapist
and family create a co-evolving reality through their interactions
until now. No one has described the process by which these concepts
are played out in the course of therapy. Cecchin, Lane and Ray are
opening the way for a new field of enquiry in psychotherapy. In
this book the authors identify the therapist's values and beliefs
which they describe as prejudices, then they identify the
equivalent prejudices held by the family, and finally they trace
the ways a prejudice from one side affects the other and is, in
turn, affected by the other. The book is a blend of theoretical
discussion supported by case examples from therapy and the world at
large. Readers of this book will discover values about themselves
which guide their therapy but have long since been rendered to some
unconscious realm: values about certainty, control, accountability
and the search for understanding.
Irreverence: A Strategy for Therapists' Survival marks the end
result of a collaboration between three creative and highly
respected therapists and writers in the family therapy field. It
continues the tradition of the Milan group and later systemic
thinkers by examining the way a therapist's own thinking can block
the process of therapy and lead to feeling stuck. The authors
define and demonstrate the use of a concept in the therapeutic
field - irreverence - which allows therapists to free themselves
from the limitations of their own theoretical schools of thought
and the familiar hypotheses they apply to their client families.
They illustrate their ideas with some very challenging family
therapy cases and include an interesting consultation with the
staff caring for a hospitalised patient. The book also extends the
notion of irreverence beyond therapy to the fields of training and
research where its application is both fresh and profound.
Two central ideas have become part of the orthodoxy of modern
family therapy thinking. The first is that the therapist is part of
the system he or she observes, and the second is that the therapist
and family create a co-evolving reality through their interactions
until now. No one has described the process by which these concepts
are played out in the course of therapy. Cecchin, Lane and Ray are
opening the way for a new field of enquiry in psychotherapy. In
this book the authors identify the therapist's values and beliefs
which they describe as prejudices, then they identify the
equivalent prejudices held by the family, and finally they trace
the ways a prejudice from one side affects the other and is, in
turn, affected by the other. The book is a blend of theoretical
discussion supported by case examples from therapy and the world at
large. Readers of this book will discover values about themselves
which guide their therapy but have long since been rendered to some
unconscious realm: values about certainty, control, accountability
and the search for understanding.
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