Re-Visioning Family Therapy, Third Edition: Addressing Diversity in Clinical Practice Third Edition – Ebook PDF Version – Digital Instant Dowload.
Product details:
- ISBN-10 : 1462531938
- ISBN-13 : 978-1462531936
- Author:Monica McGoldrick (Editor), Kenneth V. Hardy (Editor)
A leading text for courses that go beyond the basics of family systems theory, intervention techniques, and diversity, this influential work has now been significantly revised with 65% new material. The volume explores how family relationships–and therapy itself–are profoundly shaped by race, social class, gender, religion, sexual orientation, and other intersecting dimensions of marginalization and privilege. Chapters from leading experts guide the practitioner to challenge assumptions about family health and pathology, understand the psychosocial impact of oppression, and tap into clients’ cultural resources for healing. Practical clinical strategies are interwoven with theoretical insights, case examples, training ideas, and therapists’ reflections on their own cultural and family legacies.
Table contents:
- I. Theoretical Perspectives
- 1. The Power of Naming
- 2. Re‑Visioning Gender, Re‑Visioning Power: Equity, Accountability, and Refusing to Silo
- 3. Social Class, Rising Inequality, and the American Dream
- 4. The Sociocultural Trauma of Poverty: Theoretical and Clinical Considerations for Working with Poo
- 5. Spirituality, Suffering, and Resilience
- II. Sociocultural Trauma and Homelessness
- 6. Homelessness and the Spiritual Meaning of Home
- 7. Transnational Journeys
- 8. Climbing Up the Rough Side of the Mountain: Hope, Culture, and Therapy
- 9. Toward a Psychology of the Oppressed: Understanding the Invisible Wounds of Trauma
- III. Racial Identity
- 10. Native American Identity Transformation: Integrating a Naming Ceremony with Family Therapy
- 11. Letting My Spirits Guide Me: Multicultural and Multiracial Legacies
- 12. Moving toward Multiracial Legitimacy: A Personal Reflection
- 13. On Being a Black Dominican
- 14. Facing the Black Shadow: Power from the Inside Out
- 15. White Privilege and Male Privilege: A Personal Account of Coming to See Correspondences through
- 16. Dismantling White Male Privilege within Family Therapy
- 17. The Inevitable Whiteness of Being (White): Whiteness and Intersectionality in Family Therapy Pra
- 18. Brown in America: Living with Racial and Religious Bias
- IV. Cultural Legacies and Stories: Therapists’ Experiences
- 19. Black Genealogy Revisited: Restorying an African American Family
- 20. White Privilege, Pathological Shame and Guilt, and the Perversion of Morality
- 21. The Discovery of My Multicultural Identity
- 22. Going Home: One Orphan’s Journey from Chicago to Poland and Back
- 23. Hyperlinked Identity: A Generative Resource in a Divisive World
- 24. The Semitism Schism, Revisited: Jewish–Palestinian Legacies in a Family Therapy Training Conte
- 25. No Single‑Issue Lives: Identity Transitions and Transformations across the Life Cycle
- V. Implications for Clinical Practice
- 26. Working with LGBT Families
- 27. Same‑Sex Couples: Successful Coping with Minority Stress
- 28. Working with Immigrant and Refugee Families
- 29. Therapy with Heterosexual Black Couples through a Racial Lens
- 30. A Fifth‑Province Approach to Intracultural Issues in an Irish Context: Marginal Illuminations
- 31. The Power of Song to Promote Healing, Hope, and Justice: Lessons from the African American Exper
- 32. Interracial Asian Couples: Beyond Black and White
- VI. Implications for Training
- 33. Re‑Visioning Family Therapy Training
- 34. Social Justice in Family Therapy Training: The Power of Personal and Family Narratives
- 35. Teaching about Racism and the Implications for Practice
- 36. A Letter to Family Therapists in the 21st Century
- VII. Implications of Research for Clinical Practice
- 37. Ways of Knowing: Cultural Bias Pitfalls to Avoid When Using Research to Inform Practice
- 38. Relational Healing and Organizational Change in the Time of Evidence
- VIII. Larger Systems Work: How to Build Bridges Across the Divide
- 39. Expanding Bowen’s Concept of Societal Emotional Processes through Historic Ethnography: An Ant
- 40. An Application of Bowen Family Systems Theory in Child Welfare
- Index