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Curating Stories in Teaching Family Therapy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 February 2012

Jeanette Neden*
Affiliation:
Northumbria University, United Kingdom.j.neden@northumbria.ac.uk
*
*Address for correspondence: Jeanette Neden, Family Therapy Programmes Leader, Northumbria University, Room G214, Coach Lane Campus East, Benton, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE7 7XA, England.
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Abstract

In this article I explore the use of Pearce and Pearce's' (1998) notion of ‘curating stories’ and ‘transcendent story-telling’ for teaching about models in family therapy. Taking a position of curator, the discussion invites students into inclusive and pluralist thinking about the many models in family therapy's collection. Two story-making frameworks of Stratigraphy and Australian Aboriginal ‘Dreaming’ are curated in a sequential way allowing a thick description and lived story of pluralism to emerge. Creative use of metaphors invites a context for transforming knowledge and abilities towards pluralism. I outline how family therapy can be taught using these metaphors as a way of freeing students to see its history as both interpretation and lived experience.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011

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