Drama, Psychotherapy and Psychosis: Dramatherapy and Psychodrama with People Who Hear VoicesRoutledge, 2004 M03 11 - 304 pages
John Casson - Winner of the British Psychodrama Association (BPA) Lifetime Achievement Award 2012! Drama, Psychotherapy and Psychosis explores the use of drama and theatre in the challenging area of working with people who hear voices, focusing especially on survivors of abuse and those diagnosed as suffering from schizophrenia. In examining the often baffling and frightening world of psychosis the book offers alternative models of madness and the self, which form the basis for therapeutic interventions.Illustrated by case histories and examples of practice, this book provides a description and analysis of voice hearing. Chapters cover areas including: * historical perspectives on psychosis and hearing voices * group psychodrama * dramatherapy with individuals. Drama, Psychotherapy and Psychosis demonstrates how creative action methods can be helpful to those who hear voices. It provides guidelines for good practice; essential to all those interested in promoting the safe use of these methods in therapy. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 29
Page 17
... Gloria: I am plagued with my sister-in-law's image and sulky expression; disapproving of my thoughts on any subject about her. I've started hearing her criticism as badly as she used to criticise me in real life. She liked to blame me ...
... Gloria: I am plagued with my sister-in-law's image and sulky expression; disapproving of my thoughts on any subject about her. I've started hearing her criticism as badly as she used to criticise me in real life. She liked to blame me ...
Page 18
... Gloria: Voices give a commentary on what I'm doing. Feels intrusive but also sometimes helpful and also controlling . . . sometimes feel a guidance. This was helpful when she could choose whether to follow the guidance, sometimes ...
... Gloria: Voices give a commentary on what I'm doing. Feels intrusive but also sometimes helpful and also controlling . . . sometimes feel a guidance. This was helpful when she could choose whether to follow the guidance, sometimes ...
Page 19
... Gloria heard music hefore she heard voices. Overlapping categories These categories overlap in that a voice might first be identified as a demon and then emerge as a known other such as an ahuser or, in Tina's case, her husband. Tina: I ...
... Gloria heard music hefore she heard voices. Overlapping categories These categories overlap in that a voice might first be identified as a demon and then emerge as a known other such as an ahuser or, in Tina's case, her husband. Tina: I ...
Page 25
... Gloria (speaking about her voices): When we oppress ourselves the messages we draw on are often from the past and out of date, the here and now is what we must refer to for ourselves. Grief and loss in a previous generation can be ...
... Gloria (speaking about her voices): When we oppress ourselves the messages we draw on are often from the past and out of date, the here and now is what we must refer to for ourselves. Grief and loss in a previous generation can be ...
Page 29
... Gloria: l thought l would harm my family (in response to voices) so I distanced myself. This can result in a lack/loss of relationship: in extreme it becomes an overdistance. Diane: I felt great comfort in being isolated hut ...
... Gloria: l thought l would harm my family (in response to voices) so I distanced myself. This can result in a lack/loss of relationship: in extreme it becomes an overdistance. Diane: I felt great comfort in being isolated hut ...
Contents
7 | |
14 | |
33 | |
Theatre madness and healing | 51 |
The twentieth century theatrotherapy psychodrama and dramatherapy | 63 |
Dramatherapy with individuals finding a voice and telling stories | 92 |
The wave and the whelm distance and empowerment | 114 |
Individual dramatherapy Cheryll | 126 |
What is helpful and not helpful in dramatherapy and psychodrama | 212 |
Guidelines for good practice | 239 |
Afterword | 249 |
Voices interview | 252 |
The etymology of whelm | 254 |
Purchasing the Five Story Self Structure | 256 |
Comparative costings hospital medication and therapy | 257 |
The Morenean method of psychodramatising suicidal ideation | 260 |
The theatre model of the self | 146 |
Group dramatherapy | 163 |
Individual psychodrama Harry | 182 |
Group psychodrama | 197 |
References | 261 |
Author index | 275 |
Subject index | 279 |
Other editions - View all
Drama, Psychotherapy and Psychosis: Dramatherapy and Psychodrama with People ... John Witham Casson No preview available - 2004 |
Common terms and phrases
able activities aesthetic distance aggression anger Anton audience auxiliary Casson catharsis chairs Chapter Chervil Cheryll child client container coping countertransference created creative Dave delusions diagnosed Diane Dillon dissociation distance dramatherapy and psychodrama dreams effect emotional empowered enable explore express fantasy fear feelings felt Gloria group members group therapy hallucinations Harry healing hear voices heard Hearing Voices Network hehaviour helpful implicit drama individual therapy interpersonal intrapsychic isolation Leah listen McLuskie medication mental illness metaphor Moreno mother offer overwhelmed patients person projected play protagonist psychiatrist psychosis psychotherapy psychotic experiences reality rehearsals relationship relaxation role play role reversal Romme and Escher safe schizophrenic self-esteem self-harm sense session sexual abuse shamanic Sheila Slade social atom social skills someone space speak spontaneity talk technique theatre model therapeutic therapist things thought thought disorder toy theatre trauma voice hearers voice hearing vulnerable whelm