Dramatherapy with Families, Groups and Individuals: Waiting in the Wings

Author:   Dr Sue Jennings
Publisher:   Jessica Kingsley Publishers
Edition:   New edition
ISBN:  

9781853021442


Pages:   160
Publication Date:   01 May 1992
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

Our Price $83.99 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

Dramatherapy with Families, Groups and Individuals: Waiting in the Wings


Add your own review!

Overview

Only recently has the therapeutic potential of the arts within medical practice been recognized in the West. Dramatherapy as an art form has emerged during the past 30 years as a clinical and educational practice for individual and group therapeutic intervention by dramatherapists and other arts therapists. A wide range of professional people integrate a dramatherapeutic approach into their professional frame of reference, including nurses, doctors, social workers, probation officers, psychologists and artists of all kinds. This book, by one of the leaders in this exciting and relatively new field is the first to present a working framework for dramatherapists, social workers, family and marital therapists and others running groups. This framework primarily deals with dramatherapy in the non-clinical setting such as family centres, residential children's homes, social services resources and intermediate treatment centres. Separate chapters cover current theory, methodology and application in specific client areas including child abuse. The author addresses work with children and adults, both individually and in groups, illustrated by case history examples.

Full Product Details

Author:   Dr Sue Jennings
Publisher:   Jessica Kingsley Publishers
Imprint:   Jessica Kingsley Publishers
Edition:   New edition
Dimensions:   Width: 15.80cm , Height: 0.90cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.260kg
ISBN:  

9781853021442


ISBN 10:   185302144
Pages:   160
Publication Date:   01 May 1992
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  General/trade ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1. Scene setting and shaping. 2. Stages and scripts. 3. Mainsprings and methods. 4. Dramatherapy with families and groups. 5. Dramatherapy with individuals. 6. Masking and unmasking: the interface of dramatherapy. 7. The dramatherapist as frontiersperson. Appendices. References. Further reading. The Institute of Dramatherapy. Professional Organisations. The Market: Dramatherapists and other professionals working with groups interested in the use of dramatherapy.

Reviews

"Sue Jennings' book is essentially a teaching manual for practising dramatherapists, but by virtue of its general approach it will appeal to a much wider audience, and especially to those involved in any way with theatre or drama. Jennings' main argument is that dramatherapy is best understood - and activated - when it is treated as an art form rather than as a particular type of psychotherapy. Where psychotherapists will refer to theory or case histories for illumination, dramatherapists are more likely, and are well advised, to turn to plays, stories, myths or symbols as a way of understanding and resolving difficulties. Jennings gives a clear account of dramatherapy theory, fully illustrated by extensive reference to actual work with groups and individuals - while the question of the difference between dramatherapy and psychodrama is raised in innumerable books and articles, I have never found it answered as well as it is here. Psychodrama uses drama as a way of helping people get close to their problems, whilst dramatherapy takes action and images (often archetypal rather than personal) as a means of distancing group members from their life situations, and yet, paradoxically, helping them to understand those situations better. As Jennings puts it, ""The paradox of drama is that we understand more about ourselves because we have played at being other people."" Starting with Remedial Drama in 1973, Sue Jennings has written a series of important and influential books on dramatherapy, and, more than anyone else, has been responsible for the growth of dramatherapy as an independent professional discipline. This book deserves to take its place alongside the others on the shelves of anyone interested in drama or therapy. -- New Theatre Quarterly Not only is it extremely well written, but the theoretical models and issues outlined are worked through with the use of detailed and clear examples... deserves to be widely read by specialists and non-specialists alike. -- Counselling She shows an impressive knowledge of myths and dramatic literature and demonstrates their therapeutic validity. The case examples are wonderful. -- Dramascope This is a clear, well-written text that reflects a dramatherapist who is clinically astute and well-grounded in drama, theatre, and ritual processes. There is no doubt that Jennings is a trailblazing pioneer whose journey makes ours a little easier. -- The Arts in Psychotherapy"


Sue Jennings' book is essentially a teaching manual for practising dramatherapists, but by virtue of its general approach it will appeal to a much wider audience, and especially to those involved in any way with theatre or drama. Jennings' main argument is that dramatherapy is best understood - and activated - when it is treated as an art form rather than as a particular type of psychotherapy. Where psychotherapists will refer to theory or case histories for illumination, dramatherapists are more likely, and are well advised, to turn to plays, stories, myths or symbols as a way of understanding and resolving difficulties. Jennings gives a clear account of dramatherapy theory, fully illustrated by extensive reference to actual work with groups and individuals - while the question of the difference between dramatherapy and psychodrama is raised in innumerable books and articles, I have never found it answered as well as it is here. Psychodrama uses drama as a way of helping people get close to their problems, whilst dramatherapy takes action and images (often archetypal rather than personal) as a means of distancing group members from their life situations, and yet, paradoxically, helping them to understand those situations better. As Jennings puts it, The paradox of drama is that we understand more about ourselves because we have played at being other people. Starting with Remedial Drama in 1973, Sue Jennings has written a series of important and influential books on dramatherapy, and, more than anyone else, has been responsible for the growth of dramatherapy as an independent professional discipline. This book deserves to take its place alongside the others on the shelves of anyone interested in drama or therapy. -- New Theatre Quarterly Not only is it extremely well written, but the theoretical models and issues outlined are worked through with the use of detailed and clear examples... deserves to be widely read by specialists and non-specialists alike. -- Counselling She shows an impressive knowledge of myths and dramatic literature and demonstrates their therapeutic validity. The case examples are wonderful. -- Dramascope This is a clear, well-written text that reflects a dramatherapist who is clinically astute and well-grounded in drama, theatre, and ritual processes. There is no doubt that Jennings is a trailblazing pioneer whose journey makes ours a little easier. -- The Arts in Psychotherapy


Author Information

Sue Jennings , PhD, FRAI, is a consultant dramatherapist and senior research fellow at the University of London, and innovator of Dramatherapy and Symbolic Play methods. She is currently working with eating disorders, infertility and perpetrators as well as victims of physical and sexual abuse. She is Director of Dramatherapy Consultants, and the author of Remedial Drama (1973 A & C Black), Creative Therapy (1975 Kemble Press), Drama in Groupwork (1986 Winslow Press), and editor of Dramatherapy Theory and Practice (1987 Croom Helm).

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

MRG2025CC

 

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List