Narrative
therapy is a form of
psychotherapy that seeks to help people identify their values and the skills
and knowledge they have to live these values, so they can effectively confront
whatever problems they face. The therapist seeks to help the person co-author a
new narrative about themselves by investigating the history of those qualities.
Narrative therapy claims to be a social justice approach to therapeutic
conversations, seeking to challenge dominant discourses that it claims shape
people's lives in destructive ways. The approach was developed during the 1970s
and 1980s, largely by Australian social worker Michael White and David Epston
of New Zealand.
Michael White

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