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Canals were the lifeblood of the Industrial Revolution, but
prosperity had its price: crime. From the earliest days, canals had
a shady reputation, and in Victorian Britain disturbing facts
emerged to reveal the hidden side of the water, isolated places
where sinister figures lurked in the shadows. When a brutal murder
in 1839 created a national outcry, it seemed to confirm all the
worst fears about boatmen, a tough breed of men surviving harsh
conditions, who enforced their own kind of rough justice, and were
swiftly branded as outlaws by the press. Drawing on a rich
collection of original sources, this new study by historian Susan
Law brings to life dramatic stories, gruesome, shocking and tragic.
These evocative snapshots uncover the secret world of the waterways
set apart on the edge of society, to reveal the real human cost of
the Industrial Revolution.
This humorous book about mothers in all their varieties is one
woman's journey from devoted daughter to loving mother to
non-wicked stepmother to well-intentioned mother-in-law to doting
grandmother. Humorous and heartwarming, like a warm fuzzy pair of
slippers with a lollipop stuck to them.
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Art Therapy and Anger (Paperback)
Annette Coulter, Terri Coyle, Hilary Brosh, Maggie Ambridge; Edited by Marian Liebmann; Contributions by …
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R892
Discovery Miles 8 920
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Professionals working in a range of clinical settings are regularly
called upon to work with angry clients, and they may find their
skills and resources for working with this powerful emotion
limited. Art Therapy and Anger demonstrates how the non-verbal
medium of art therapy provides an ideal outlet for the expression
of thoughts and feelings that are too complex and painful to put
into words, presenting a new and practical approach to dealing with
this area of need. Marian Liebmann argues that clients of all ages
will benefit from the art-making process, which helps them to slow
down and consider their emotions more calmly. The tangible product
of their efforts allows clients to assess and react to what they
have depicted, providing a lucid and safe framework for better
understanding the causes and effects of their anger. This book
draws together contributions from art therapists who work in a wide
variety of contexts, including work with offenders, mental health
clients, clients with brain injury and those with cancer, with the
view of helping clients to manage their anger more constructively.
This positive, practical volume will be of great interest to art
therapists and students, as well as practitioners working with
angry clients in various fields such as mental health, probation,
counselling and medicine.
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