Narrative · Treatment: Collaborative Language System Approach Narrative · Therapy is a philosophical way of thinking, where individuals come closer to treatment and exist in the world. Major developers of this approach: Michael White, David Epson, Harry Goolishian, Harlene Anderson, Houston Galveston Institute Assumption I: Story therapy is a joint language system approach where language and dialogue is the core concept. These core concepts are rooted in postmodern interpretation including contemporary interpretation and social constructivism.
The integration of this type of cooperation focusing on linguistic emphasis on the client's perception and superiority - all heritage of family therapy movement and social constitutionism - forms the basis of the story model. Many examples of applications of this model are cited in the literature, including therapists, teachers, counselors, community workers, documentary workers, and various background technology experts, adults and children, families and communities (eg , Horowitz, 2010).
Narrative therapy: Approach of a collaborative language system • Narrative therapy is a philosophical way of thinking that an individual approaches treatment and exists in the world. • Major developers of this approach: Michael White, David Epson, Harry Goolishian, Harry Goolishian, and Harlene Anderson, Houston Galveston Institute • Prerequisites I: Story therapy is a joint language system approach where language and dialogue is the core concept. - The value of the story in the ritual Leslie Marmon In the new ritual of Silko, the story is the most powerful and persuasive form of human expression. The story exists in every part of everything and they are basically organic. The story has a lot of possibilities to express the high power of human beings, the dark heart and the desire for self destruction.
Story therapy was developed by Michael White and David Epston in the 1980's. This is a respect and cooperative approach to counseling and the approach to the local community. It is based on the idea of focusing on stories of people's lives and creating problems in social, cultural and political contexts. Counselors and therapists who are interested in narrative thinking and practice eliminate the talk of saturation and repression and tell "intentional" stories such as favorable records of people's lives, their intentions, hopes, promises, values, etc. I work with people to discover. Desire and Dream Essentially, in the handling of stories, the focus is not "expert" to solve the problem, but through dialogue, hopeful, preferred, and hidden Focus on those who discover the possibilities. This is "the creation" of the stories and lives of the people Michael White said.