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The Cocreation of Crazy Patchworks: Becoming Rhizomatic in Systemic Therapy
Author(s) -
Sermijn Jasmina,
Loots Gerrit
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
family process
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.011
H-Index - 74
eISSN - 1545-5300
pISSN - 0014-7370
DOI - 10.1111/famp.12119
Subject(s) - vision , narrative , narrative therapy , postmodernism , metaphor , self , context (archaeology) , psychology , aesthetics , psychoanalysis , sociology , epistemology , literature , social psychology , art , history , philosophy , linguistics , archaeology , anthropology
In the field of systemic therapy, there has been much discussion recently about the narrative self. This concept refers to the idea that the self is narratively constructed in and through the stories which someone tells about him/herself. The story is thereby not only viewed as a metaphor for selfhood: Selfhood is not compared to a story, it is a story. But what kind of story are we talking about here? If the self is a story, what does that story look like? These questions are explored in this article. Starting from the possibilities and limitations of traditional and postmodern visions on the self as a story, an alternative vision is illustrated. By considering the self as a rhizomatic story, we not only create a useful view of the way narrative selfhood is constructed within a therapy context, but we also stimulate therapists to coconstruct—together with their clients—patchworks of self‐stories. By using story fragments of our own practice, we illustrate the rhizomatic thinking and its possibilities in therapy.

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