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Introduction: Narrative in psychotherapy: The emerging metaphor

✍ Scribed by Paulo P. P. Machado; Óscar F. Gonçalves


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
26 KB
Volume
55
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9762

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


For the last decade a new metaphor has been progressively, but securely, penetrating the domains of academic and professional psychology. The "narrative" metaphor began to be widely diffused in books, journal articles, and conference papers.

Even though some ancient roots of the narrative metaphor can be traced back (c.f., Polkinghorne, 1988), we are indebted to Theodore Sarbin (1986) for introducing narrative as the alternative "root metaphor" for psychology. It is interesting to note that Sarbin acknowledged the centrality of narrative on both his academic and clinical life:

In my teaching of abnormal psychology, I had found it more useful to report on and analyze life histories, that is, stories about concrete individuals, than to overview the experiments done on nameless, faceless subjects, the results of which were expressed as probabilities. Further, in my role as clinician, I could not carry out my work unless I located the clients and their significant others in a narrative plot (p. IX-X).


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