Description
Part 1 Philosophical and theoretical perspectives: Poiesis and postmodernism - the search for a foundation in expressive arts therapy, Stephen K. Levine; Soul-nourishment or the metabolism of psyche - a broad concept of diet and medicine, Paolo J. Knill; Ethics and aesthetics - the necessity of form, Majken Jacoby; Artistic inquiry - research in expressive arts therapy, Shaun McNiff. Part 2 Clinical perspectives: Voicework as therapy - the artistic use of singing and vocal sound to heal mind and body, Paul Newham; The creative connection - a holistic expressive arts process, Natalie Rogers; Living artfully - movement as an integrative process, Daria Halprin; Layer upon layer - a therapeutic experience in the art studio, Annette Brederode; Music as mother - the mothering function of music through expressive and receptive avenues, Margareta Warja; Between imagination and belief poetry as therapeutic intervention, Margo Fuchs; Poetry in the oral tradition - serious play with words, Elizabeth McKim; Theatre of the Holocaust, Yacov Naor; In exile from the body, Melinda Asher-Meyer; On the play-ground - child psychotherapy and expressive arts therapy, Ellen G. Levine.