Using Superheroes in Counseling and Play TherapyHarness the Therapeutic Power of the Superhero!
With an incisive historical foreword by John Shelton Lawrence and insight from contributors such as Michael Brody, Patty Scanlon, and Roger Kaufman, Lawrence Rubin takes us on a dynamic tour of the benefits of using these icons of popular culture and fantasy in counseling and play therapy. Not only can superheroes assist in clinical work with children, but Rubin demonstrates how they can facilitate growth and change with teen and adults. Early childhood memories of how we felt pretending to have the power to save the world or our families in the face of impending danger still resonate in our adult lives, making the use of superheroes attractive as well, to the creative counselor. In presenting case studies and wisdom gleaned from practicing therapists' experience, Lawrence Rubin shows how it is possible to uncover children's secret identities, assist treatment of adolescents with sexual behavior problems, and inspire the journey of individuation for gay and lesbian clients, all by paying attention to our intrinsic social need for superhero fantasy and play. |
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... Aggression, and Boys Superhero Play The Angry Hero on the Team Case Studies Conclusion A Super Milieu: Using Superheroes in the Residential Treatment of Adolescents With Sexual Behavior Problems Karen Robertie, Ryan Weidenbenner, ...
Over the past several years, Enfield has been a child therapist at Catholic Social Services, where he has also done group work with preadolescent and adolescent boys using tabletop and role-playing games to help develop problemsolving ...
Growing up in a small town, Robert cultivated an active imagination, as most young boys do, by playing army with neighbor kids and wanting to be a firefighter. Robert sees his superheroes as those who defend freedom, protect and help ...
Foreword Finding Ourselves in Our Superheroes1 What is the social meaning of these supermen, superwomen, super-lovers, super-boys, supergirls, super-ducks, super-mice, supermagicians, super-safecrackers? How did Nietzsche get into the ...
It was because of his essentially Boy Scout demeanor and his iconic status as champion of “truth, justice, and the American way” that Superman could be used in World War II Bond drives. Wertham surely knew but did not acknowledge that ...
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Table des matières
SECTION II Superheroes and Unique Clinical Applications | 103 |
SECTION III Nontraditional Therapeutic Applications of Superheroes | 225 |
Afterword | 319 |
Appendix | 321 |
Index | 327 |