Popular Culture in Counseling, Psychotherapy, and Play-Based InterventionsLawrence C. Rubin, PhD, LMHC, RPT-S Springer Publishing Company, 12 mai 2008 - 416 pagini With a Foreword by Danny Fingeroth, former Group Editor of Marvel's Spider-Man comics line Popular culture, simply stated, is the language of a people, expressed through everything from its clothing, food choices, and religious practices to its media. The popular and predominant values, interests, and needs of a society find their way into mass consciousness through a variety of venues including literature, cinema, television, video games, sport, and music. Through the inter-related forces of mass production, global marketing and the Internet, the fruits of popular culture penetrate into stores, living rooms, and everyday experience of children, teens, and adults in the form of catchphrases, toys, iconography, celebrities, and indelible images. Psychotherapists and counselors who can tap into the powerful images, messages, and icons of popular culture have at their disposal an unlimited universe of resources for growth, change, and healing. Using real-world case examples and sound psychological theory, this book demonstrates how you can immediately start incorporating popular culture icons and images into your counseling or therapy. In this way, the authors will help elevate your ability to conduct clinical interviews with clients of all ages and all types of clinical problems. |
Din interiorul cărții
Rezultatele 1 - 5 din 51
... father-son scene as when Marlon Brando's Don Vito Corleone warns son Michael (Al Pacino) about who he can and can't trust in upcoming intermob negotiations? Vito expresses tearful regret that his son has to engage in the ugly business ...
... , 1964, 1980, 1981). If you look at the elements found in these tales, they correspond to universal symbols, such as Mother, Father, Hero, Wise Old Man, Great Mother, Child, and Trickster. 4 POPULAR CULTURE IN COUNSELING & PSYCHOTHERAPY.
Lawrence C. Rubin, PhD, LMHC, RPT-S. Father, Hero, Wise Old Man, Great Mother, Child, and Trickster. These archetypes are believed to be the structural components of the collective unconscious—images and symbols found in every culture ...
... father's cloak of invisibility. As Harry looked into the mirror, he saw a woman with green eyes like his own and a man whose glasses and untidy hair were also strangely familiar. These images, along with subsequent others, were actually ...
... father, who parenthetically was an Animagus, a wizard who can transform at will into an animal. Harry's father chose a stag. By choosing the same patronus, Harry introjected his father in a healing way. Similarly, clients enter therapy ...
Cuprins
Music | 61 |
Movies | 97 |
Video and Board Games | 163 |
Television | 225 |
Sports | 273 |
Innovations in the Use of Popular Culture | 313 |
365 | |
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
Popular Culture in Counseling, Psychotherapy, and Play-Based Interventions Lawrence C. Rubin Nu există previzualizare disponibilă - 2008 |