Image de couverture de Imagery and Visual Expression in Therapy
Imagery and Visual Expression in Therapy
Titre:
Imagery and Visual Expression in Therapy
ISBN (Numéro international normalisé des livres):
9781475704440
Edition:
1st ed. 1990.
PRODUCTION_INFO:
New York, NY : Springer US : Imprint: Springer, 1990.
Description physique:
300 p. 24 illus. online resource.
Collections:
Emotions, Personality, and Psychotherapy
Table des matières:
I. Levels and Components of Imagery and Expression -- 1. Imagery in Verbal Therapy and Art Therapy -- 2. Images and Information Processing -- 3. Levels and Functions of Symbolism -- 4. Depicting and Integrating Images -- 5. Levels of Expression and Systems Approach to Therapy -- II. Function and Processes of Imagery and Visual Expression in Therapy -- 6. Connections and Disconnections between Levels of Representation and Expression -- 7. Active Imagination, Guided Daydreams, and Dreams -- 8. Daydreaming and Adolescent Depression -- 9. Images of Disintegration and Integration in Psychosis and Schizophrenia -- 10. Imagery and Emotions in Healing -- Overview: A Systems View of Imagery and Visual Expression -- References -- Author Index.
Extrait:
Images as means of expression have fascinated and spoken to me for a long time. Yet it has been a far-reaching and circuitous journey to syn­ thesize imagery and visual expression in the present form. Early in my life my interest in images expressed itself in art, first as a young child drawing, then responding to works of art and enjoying the life conveyed through colors, forms, and lines that created recognizable images and suggested different moods. The centering, transformative, and spir­ itual aspects of art emerged as I sought out art in times of personal turmoil. I returned to the expressive aspects of art through my training as a painter. Later I discovered in my own art, as well as in others' expressions, as a teacher and an art therapist, that many times we ex­ press more through visual means than we are consciously aware of doing. The writings of art therapy pioneers Naumburg (1950, 1953, 1966) and Ulman (1961, 1965) and Rhyne's (1973) gestalt art therapy provided a framework for my own observations. Workshops and literature on guided imagery opened another door to the inner experience through images. The discovery of Jung's concept of archetypes helped me to integrate images into a mind/body frame bridging from the biological roots of the archetypal images to the spiritual aspects of our existence.
Terme sujet:
Auteur collectif ajouté:
Langue:
Anglais