
Culturally Affirmative Psychotherapy With Deaf Persons
- 304 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Culturally Affirmative Psychotherapy With Deaf Persons
About this book
The impetus for this volume is the growing awareness within the mental health and larger community of a culturally affirmative model for understanding and assisting deaf people. In contrast to the "medical-pathological" model which treats deafness as a disability, the "cultural" model guides us to view deaf persons in relation to the deaf community--a group of people with a common language, culture, and collective identity. A primary tenant of culturally affirmative psychotherapy is to understand and respect such differences, not to eradicate them.
The contributors to this volume present a practical and realistic model of providing culturally affirmative counseling and psychotherapy for deaf people. The three dimensions of this model have been delineated by the multicultural counseling literature. These dimensions assert that culturally affirmative psychotherapy with deaf persons requires therapist self-awareness, knowledge of the deaf community/culture, and understanding of culturally-syntonic therapeutic interventions.
The first to exhaustively delineate the implications of the cultural model of deafness for counseling deaf people, this book is essential reading for anyone who works in an educational or counseling capacity with the deaf. This audience includes not only psychotherapists, but also vocational, guidance and residence counselors, teachers, independent living skills specialists, interpreters, and administrators of programs for the deaf.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Preface
- Dedication
- 1 What is Culturally Affirmative Psychotherapy?
- 2 Cultural Self-Awareness in Hearing People
- 3 Is There a Psychology of the Hearing?
- 4 Of Deaf-mutes, the Strange, and the Modern Deaf Self
- 5 The Development of Culturally Deaf Identities
- 6 Utilization of Traumatic Transference by a Hearing Therapist
- 7 Storytelling and the Use of Culturally Appropriate Metaphors in Psychotherapy With Deaf People
- 8 Report From the Front Lines: Balancing Multiple Roles of a Deafness Therapist
- 9 Mental Health Service and the Deaf Community: Deaf Leaders As Culture Brokers
- 10 Deaf Therapists, Deaf Clients, and the Therapeutic Relationship
- 11 Concluding Thoughts
- Author Index
- Subject Index