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How Family Therapy Stole My Interiority and Was Then Rescued by Open Dialogue
Author(s) -
Rhodes Paul
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
australian and new zealand journal of family therapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.297
H-Index - 19
eISSN - 1467-8438
pISSN - 0814-723X
DOI - 10.1002/anzf.1291
Subject(s) - autoethnography , introspection , project commissioning , sociology , aesthetics , psychology , publishing , psychoanalysis , media studies , art , gender studies , cognitive psychology , literature
This paper serves as a naive autoethnography, based on the effect of open dialogue training on my practice as a systemic family therapist. It follows a beginner's attempt at a newly recognised form of writing, one that reflects the messy, emergent links between people, voices, experiences, sensations, memories, theories, objects, friends, and other entities, one that is also, however, actually in my head and body and real, territorialised in place, cities, streets, and rooms. It is an autoethnography in that it serves as a narrated introspection, built on a barometric research machine that will be described.