
The Who You Dream Yourself : Playing and Interpretation in Psychotherapy and Theatre.
Title:
The Who You Dream Yourself : Playing and Interpretation in Psychotherapy and Theatre.
Author:
Richards, Val.
ISBN:
9781849404914
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (167 pages)
Contents:
COVER -- CONTENTS -- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS -- ABOUT THE AUTHOR -- Preface -- Introduction -- PART I SIGNS AND SPACES -- CHAPTER ONE Language, space, and meaning-making -- CHAPTER TWO The genesis of meaning-making -- CHAPTER THREE A time and a place for playing: transitional phenomena -- CHAPTER FOUR "An act apart": meaning-making in theatre and therapy" -- CHAPTER FIVE Analytic interpretation: games and playing -- CHAPTER SIX Interpretation and playing: freedom of association -- CHAPTER SEVEN No-space: psychotic meaning-making and regression -- PART TWO THE STRUGGLE BETWEEN MASKS -- CHAPTER EIGHT The mask of language -- CHAPTER NINE Forced masks and free masks -- CHAPTER TEN Child's play: show and hide -- CHAPTER ELEVEN The search for free masks -- PART THREE SIGNS AND TIMES "ON THE STAGE, IT IS ALWAYS NOW" -- CHAPTER TWELVE Time, fantasy, and imagination -- CHAPTER THIRTEEN "A dead, living murdered man!" -- CHAPTER FOURTEEN This year -- CHAPTER FIFTEEN . . . Next year . . . -- CHAPTER SIXTEEN Sometime: the past and the future perfect -- CHAPTER SEVENTEEN Never -- CHAPTER EIGHTEEN The who you dream yourself -- REFERENCES -- INDEX.
Abstract:
'At the time of beginning my own therapy, I was teaching drama and theatre studies and become fascinated by the analogies between theatre and therapy, especially by how these set-apart space-times affect the behaviour of meaning-making and the seeming immensity of the therapist's power.'...as a trainee psychotherapist, discovering the writings of Winnicott, I realised that his theory of transitional phenomena and his vision of "playing"...provided a theoretical underpinning to the bond between theatre and therapy, bringing together the three parts of this book.'- From the IntroductionThe motif of time and space runs as a continual thread through this book, which examines the relationship between psychotherapy and the theatre as underpinned by Winnicott's writings. Richards supplements her theories with Jung's ideas on self, the writings of Lacan and the prose, drama and poetry of Yeats - an unusual blend between diverse and often opposing schools of thought.The book itself is divided into three parts. Part One focuses on the workings of language, space and meaning-making in the settings of infancy, therapy and theatre. Part Two looks at the "struggle between masks", which is used as a metaphor for self and the representation of self. Richards considers how the phenomenon of theatrical "forced masks and free masks" serves as an analogy for the range of positions inadequately covered by the True and False Self dichotomy of Winnicitt. Part Three looks at signs and times by showing that space and linear time are one and indivisible: disturbance in one means disturbance in the other. The point is illustrated with an in-depth examination of Yeat's Purgatory. Elsewhere in the book, case studies are used to illustrate formulations.This book is highly recommended for analysts, therapists and trainees, in particular child and Winnicottian therapists, and
anyone with an interest in the role of theatre plays in the wider world.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Genre:
Electronic Access:
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