How Problems Evolve and Dissolve: Integrating Narrative and Strategic Concepts
- 1 September 1993
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Family Process
- Vol. 32 (3) , 291-309
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1545-5300.1993.00291.x
Abstract
This article presents an approach to therapy that links narrative and strategic concepts. The term "strategic" is used not in the prescriptive, impositional sense that has come to be associated with the method, but in terms of having a clear therapeutic direction in promoting change. The authors outline an approach to therapy that expands upon the fundamental principles of the MRI (Mental Research Institute) Brief Therapy model, elaborating more upon its constructivist premises than its prescriptive practices. They propose that by mapping how ordinary life events affect a person's preferred view, the therapist can locate the key narrative elements that shape the course of the problem and direct its solution. The authors suggest a framework for how problems evolve and dissolve. When new events are construed as contradicting family members' preferred narrative accounts, problems evolve. Problems dissolve when family members see the event, and the ideas and actions of others, as consonant with their preferred ways of being and acting.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Transformations: A Blueprint for Narrative Changes in TherapyFamily Process, 1992
- Some irreverent thoughts on the limits of family therapy: Toward a language-based explanation of human systems.Journal of Family Psychology, 1989
- Human Systems as Linguistic Systems: Preliminary and Evolving Ideas about the Implications for Clinical TheoryFamily Process, 1988
- Language systems and therapy: An evolving idea.Psychotherapy, 1987
- Brief Therapy: Focused Solution DevelopmentFamily Process, 1986
- TOWARD A THEORY OF FRAMES AND REFRAMING: THE SOCIAL NATURE OF FRAMES*Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, 1985
- Depression Following Stroke: Brief, Problem‐Focused Family TreatmentFamily Process, 1980
- Brief Therapy: Focused Problem ResolutionFamily Process, 1974