Spelling suggestions: "subject:"drama -- atherapeutic used"" "subject:"drama -- btherapeutic used""
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A systematic model of psychodramaSchramski, Thomas George January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
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The efficacy of the psychodrama technique of doubling in increasing self-acceptanceDold, Eugene R. 01 January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
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An ecosystemic approach to psychodrama :Lötter, Marensia. January 1994 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of South Africa, 1994.
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An ecosystemic approach to psychodrama : aesthetics and pragmaticsLotter, Marensia 06 1900 (has links)
This study propagates a move away from the dominant practices of
psychodrama with its emphasis on catharsis and insight as the main components of a therapeutic experience.
It proposes a systemic orientation to psychodrama where protagonists
may encounter the circularity of the systems in which they are embedded and through this process encounter new meaning.
Case studies are presented which exemplify an evolutionary process of
creating what the author refers to as "ecosystemic psychodrama". This
ecosystemic psychodrama is based on second-order cybernetics and what is aimed for is that as a therapy it should present something of the balance between the aesthetic and pragmatic views of therapy that Keeney (1983a) describes as complementary. / Psychology / M.A. (Clinical Psychology)
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An ecosystemic approach to psychodrama :Lötter, Marensia. January 1994 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of South Africa, 1994.
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An ecosystemic approach to psychodrama : aesthetics and pragmaticsLotter, Marensia 06 1900 (has links)
This study propagates a move away from the dominant practices of
psychodrama with its emphasis on catharsis and insight as the main components of a therapeutic experience.
It proposes a systemic orientation to psychodrama where protagonists
may encounter the circularity of the systems in which they are embedded and through this process encounter new meaning.
Case studies are presented which exemplify an evolutionary process of
creating what the author refers to as "ecosystemic psychodrama". This
ecosystemic psychodrama is based on second-order cybernetics and what is aimed for is that as a therapy it should present something of the balance between the aesthetic and pragmatic views of therapy that Keeney (1983a) describes as complementary. / Psychology / M.A. (Clinical Psychology)
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A COMPARISON OF CERTAIN RORSCHACH SCORE PATTERNS WITH PSYCHODRAMA ACTION PATTERNSShapiro, Jay Noah, 1927- January 1964 (has links)
No description available.
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Survey of the developments and adaptations of informal dramaHertneky, Judith Case. January 1961 (has links)
Call number: LD2668 .T4 1961 H47
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The meaning of change through therapeutic enactment in psychodramaBrooks, Dale Theodore 05 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to understand the meaning of change through therapeutic
enactment in psychodrama. Existential and hermeneutic phenomenology conducted from the
perspective of a dialectic between storied narrative and thematic analysis was used to investigate
the essential meaning of the experience. Eight co-researchers who had experienced significant
change through therapeutic enactment in psychodrama were interviewed in depth. Transcripts
from these interviews were transposed into narrative form in order to straighten the story of
change through enactment in a before, during, and after sequence. These eight individual
narratives were validated by the co-researchers. An independent reviewer checked each narrative
against the original transcript, video tapes of the enactments, and comments of each co-researcher
for trustworthiness. Each validated narrative provided a rich description of the lived experience
of change through therapeutic enactment.
In addition, fifty-nine (59) essential themes were formulated from the individual narratives:
Fourteen (14) in the planning stage, twenty-four (24) in the enactive stage, and twenty-one (21) in
the reflective, or integrative stage, of the enactment process. These themes were then woven into
a common story representing the pattern and meaning of change through therapeutic enactment
for this group of co-researchers. Finally, notations made during the transposing of the transcripts
into personal narratives, formulation of the essential themes, and construction of the common
story were used to develop a theoretical story of change through therapeutic enactment, as a final
level of hermeneutic interpretation. This theoretical story was then presented in summary form as
a thematic sequence of multi-modal change processes representing a model of change through
therapeutic enactment.
The results of this study suggested numerous theoretical and technical implications.
Foremost among theoretical implications was the suggestion that Tomkins (1992) script theory of
affect may best illuminate the effects and processes of psychodrama and enactment. This study
also had implications for interactional theories of development, contemporary psychoanalytic
theories of interpersonal functioning, theories of moral development, theories of dream
functioning, and ethological theories of myth and ritual.
The results of this study also suggested a number of additional qualitative and comparative
outcome studies for future research.
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The meaning of change through therapeutic enactment in psychodramaBrooks, Dale Theodore 05 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to understand the meaning of change through therapeutic
enactment in psychodrama. Existential and hermeneutic phenomenology conducted from the
perspective of a dialectic between storied narrative and thematic analysis was used to investigate
the essential meaning of the experience. Eight co-researchers who had experienced significant
change through therapeutic enactment in psychodrama were interviewed in depth. Transcripts
from these interviews were transposed into narrative form in order to straighten the story of
change through enactment in a before, during, and after sequence. These eight individual
narratives were validated by the co-researchers. An independent reviewer checked each narrative
against the original transcript, video tapes of the enactments, and comments of each co-researcher
for trustworthiness. Each validated narrative provided a rich description of the lived experience
of change through therapeutic enactment.
In addition, fifty-nine (59) essential themes were formulated from the individual narratives:
Fourteen (14) in the planning stage, twenty-four (24) in the enactive stage, and twenty-one (21) in
the reflective, or integrative stage, of the enactment process. These themes were then woven into
a common story representing the pattern and meaning of change through therapeutic enactment
for this group of co-researchers. Finally, notations made during the transposing of the transcripts
into personal narratives, formulation of the essential themes, and construction of the common
story were used to develop a theoretical story of change through therapeutic enactment, as a final
level of hermeneutic interpretation. This theoretical story was then presented in summary form as
a thematic sequence of multi-modal change processes representing a model of change through
therapeutic enactment.
The results of this study suggested numerous theoretical and technical implications.
Foremost among theoretical implications was the suggestion that Tomkins (1992) script theory of
affect may best illuminate the effects and processes of psychodrama and enactment. This study
also had implications for interactional theories of development, contemporary psychoanalytic
theories of interpersonal functioning, theories of moral development, theories of dream
functioning, and ethological theories of myth and ritual.
The results of this study also suggested a number of additional qualitative and comparative
outcome studies for future research. / Education, Faculty of / Educational and Counselling Psychology, and Special Education (ECPS), Department of / Graduate
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