Toward a Developmentally Informed Narrative Therapy
- 1 December 1997
- journal article
- case report
- Published by Wiley in Family Process
- Vol. 36 (4) , 325-339
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1545-5300.1997.00325.x
Abstract
Narrative approaches to psychotherapy emphasize the impact of the stories or narratives we construct on our reality and behavior. However, little effort has been made to elucidate how individuals' differential capacities for meaning‐making influence the process of re‐storying lives. The present article introduces to family therapy a model of the changing nature of individuals' ability to create meaning. The model, referred to as developmental‐constructivism ( 10 ), suggests that, in addition to contextual factors, individual differences in the capacity for organizing experience will influence therapeutic efforts to generate new and more adaptive narratives. The model is also presented as a heuristic for comparing and integrating two influential approaches to narrative therapy: the externalizing approach of Michael White and the solution‐focused approach of Steve de Shazer.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Politics of Identity: Considering Community Discourse in the Externalizing of Internalized Problem ConversationsJournal of Systemic Therapies, 1996
- High-Risk Youth: Transforming Our Understanding of Human DevelopmentHuman Development, 1996
- Using a Narrative Metaphor: Implications for Theory and Clinical PracticeFamily Process, 1994
- Complex splitting of self-representations in sexually abused adolescent girlsDevelopment and Psychopathology, 1994
- Families with Adolescents: Escaping Problem LifestylesFamily Process, 1992
- Transformations: A Blueprint for Narrative Changes in TherapyFamily Process, 1992
- The Evolving SelfPublished by Harvard University Press ,1982
- The growth of logical thinking: From childhood to adolescence.Published by American Psychological Association (APA) ,1958
- The construction of reality in the child.Published by American Psychological Association (APA) ,1954