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How narrative therapy principles inform practice for therapists and helping professionals

illustrated with vignettes

John R. Stillman

pp. 83-97

This chapter is intended for readers who do not yet practice narrative therapy or identify as narrative therapists. It organizes narrative therapy as a set of principles and focuses on helping practitioners move narrative principles into practice. This exploration of principles as a framework for narrative therapy is illustrated by the use of vignettes, which show the benefit of organizing narrative as principles for practitioners with various levels of experience and different practice areas as well as for a recently developed online training program. Principles discussed include narrative metaphor, positioning (de-centered, but influential; externalization), personal agency, subordinate story development (repositioning; absent but implicit), intentionality, identity proclamation, and deconstruction (societal and cultural; personal, day-to-day).

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-31490-7_6

Full citation:

Stillman, J. R. (2016)., How narrative therapy principles inform practice for therapists and helping professionals: illustrated with vignettes, in V. Dickerson (ed.), Poststructural and narrative thinking in family therapy, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 83-97.

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