Notes for a Cultural History of Family Therapy

The official history of family therapy describes its beginnings as a daring technical and philosophical departure from traditional individual treatment in the 1960s, inspired especially by the “system thinking” of Gregory Bateson. This celebrated origin story needs to be supplemented with a longer a...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inFamily process Vol. 41; no. 1; pp. 67 - 82
Main Author Beels, C. Christian
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.03.2002
Blackwell
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Summary:The official history of family therapy describes its beginnings as a daring technical and philosophical departure from traditional individual treatment in the 1960s, inspired especially by the “system thinking” of Gregory Bateson. This celebrated origin story needs to be supplemented with a longer and larger history of both practice and thought about the family, and that is the subject of this article. The longer history goes back to the founding of social work by Mary Richmond, of pragmatism by William James, and of the organic view of social systems intervention by John Dewey. Seen against this background, family therapy is, among other things, a consequence of the development of persistent elements of American professional culture, experience, and philosophy. The taking of this historical‐anthropological view discloses also the origins of two other histories that have made their contribution to the development of family therapy: a science of observing communication processes that starts with Edward Sapir and leads to contemporary conversation analysis, and a history of mesmerism in the United States that culminates in Milton Erickson and his followers.
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ArticleID:FAMP40102000067
This article is based partly on A Different Story: The Rise of Narrative in Psychotherapy (Beels, 2001). I will also consider - from a historical point of view - certain issues concerning the role of theory in the development of family therapy, which were first raised in Newmark and Beels (1994).
Beels, 2001
(
I will also consider — from a historical point of view — certain issues concerning the role of theory in the development of family therapy, which were first raised in
Newmark and Beels (1994)
This article is based partly on
A Different Story: The Rise of Narrative in Psychotherapy
.
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:0014-7370
1545-5300
DOI:10.1111/j.1545-5300.2002.40102000067.x