Child Art TherapyJohn Wiley & Sons, 8 mar 2011 - 464 pagine An innovative guide to the practice of art therapy Since 1978, Judith Aron Rubin's Child Art Therapy has become the classic text for conducting art therapy with children. Twenty-five years later, the book still stands as the reference for mental health professionals who incorporate art into their practice. Now, with the publication of this fully updated and revised Twenty-Fifth Anniversary Edition, which includes a DVD that illustrates art therapy techniques in actual therapy settings, this pioneering guide is available to train, inform, and inspire a new generation of art therapists and those seeking to introduce art therapy into their clinical practice. The text illustrates how to:
Along with the useful techniques and activities described, numerous case studies taken from Rubin's years of practice add a vital dimension to the text, exploring how art therapy works in the real world of children's experience. Original artwork from clients and the author illuminate the material throughout. Written by an internationally recognized art therapist, Child Art Therapy, Twenty-Fifth Anniversary Edition is a comprehensive guide for learning about, practicing, and refining child art therapy. |
Dall'interno del libro
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... kind of confidentiality normally accorded to any kind of clinical material. As all Codes of Ethics state, any personal information about people in treatment is privileged information, intended only for professionals. The need.
... kind of longterm therapy sometimes described in this book, although I believe the principles are equally applicable to shortterm work, of which there are also many instances. Fortunately, it is considerably easier now for troubled ...
... , private feeling made into public form. Just as my ofteninsatiable hunger felt somehow appeased when receiving art supplies, especially brandnew ones, so looking at art had a nourishing quality as well. It was a kind of takingin, a.
... kind of validated voyeurism, the making of products was a kind of acceptable exhibitionism. So too the forbidden touching, the delight in sensory pleasures of body and earth, put aside as part of the price and privilege of growing up ...
... kind of artistic expression in the schools. Those in the progressive movement (Naumburg, 1928) were convinced that the creative experience was a vital part of any child's education, essential for healthy development (Cane, 1951). Some ...
Sommario
Family Art Therapy | |
Art Therapy with Parents | |
Group Art Therapy | |
Multimodality Group Therapy | |
Art as Therapy for Children with Disabilities | |
Art Therapy with Disabled Children and Their Parents | |
Helping the Normal Child through | |
Helping Parents through Art and Play | |
A Picture of the Therapeutic Process | |
Some Ways to Facilitate Expression | |
An Individual Art Evaluation | |
Decoding Symbolic Messages | |
Some Case Studies | |
Understanding and Helping | |
A Family Art Evaluation | |
What Child Art Therapy Is and Who Can Do | |
Why and How the Art Therapist Helps | |
How the Art Therapist Learns through Research | |
A Cautionary Note | |
Index | |