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The Concept of Race and Psychotherapy / Edition 1
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The Concept of Race and Psychotherapy / Edition 1
Current price: $109.99
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Barnes and Noble
The Concept of Race and Psychotherapy / Edition 1
Current price: $109.99
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Is our society color-blind? Trans-racial? Post-racial? And what—if anything—should this mean to professionals in clinical practice with diverse clients?
The ambitious volume
The Concept of Race and Psychotherapy
probes these questions, compelling readers to look differently at their clients (and themselves), and offering a practical framework for more effective therapy. By tracing the racial “folk taxonomies” of eight cultures in the Americas and the Caribbean, the author elegantly defines race as a fluid construct, dependent on local social, political, and historical context for meaning but meaningless in the face of science. This innovative perspective informs the rest of the book, which addresses commonly held assumptions about problem behavior and the desire to change, and presents a social-science-based therapy model, applicable to a wide range of current approaches, that emphasizes both cultural patterns and client uniqueness. Among the highlights of the coverage:
• Common elements in therapy and healing across cultures.
• The psychological appeal of racial concepts despite scientific evidence to the contrary.
• Lessons psychology can learn from anthropology.
• Three types of therapeutic relationships, with strategies for working effectively in each.
• The phenomenon of discontinuous change in brief therapy.
• Solution-focused therapy from a cross-cultural perspective.
Thought-provoking reading forpsychologists, psychiatrists, clinical social workers, and other mental health professionals as well as graduate students in these fields,
affirms the individuality—and the interconnectedness—of every client.
The ambitious volume
The Concept of Race and Psychotherapy
probes these questions, compelling readers to look differently at their clients (and themselves), and offering a practical framework for more effective therapy. By tracing the racial “folk taxonomies” of eight cultures in the Americas and the Caribbean, the author elegantly defines race as a fluid construct, dependent on local social, political, and historical context for meaning but meaningless in the face of science. This innovative perspective informs the rest of the book, which addresses commonly held assumptions about problem behavior and the desire to change, and presents a social-science-based therapy model, applicable to a wide range of current approaches, that emphasizes both cultural patterns and client uniqueness. Among the highlights of the coverage:
• Common elements in therapy and healing across cultures.
• The psychological appeal of racial concepts despite scientific evidence to the contrary.
• Lessons psychology can learn from anthropology.
• Three types of therapeutic relationships, with strategies for working effectively in each.
• The phenomenon of discontinuous change in brief therapy.
• Solution-focused therapy from a cross-cultural perspective.
Thought-provoking reading forpsychologists, psychiatrists, clinical social workers, and other mental health professionals as well as graduate students in these fields,
affirms the individuality—and the interconnectedness—of every client.