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Bilingualism, culture, and social ju...
~
Kim, Christina Da Hee.
Bilingualism, culture, and social justice in family therapy
Record Type:
Electronic resources : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Bilingualism, culture, and social justice in family therapyedited by marcela polanco, Navid Zamani, Christina Da Hee Kim.
other author:
polanco, marcela.
Published:
Cham :Springer International Publishing :2021.
Description:
xv, 96 p. :ill., digital ;24 cm.
Contained By:
Springer Nature eBook
Subject:
Family psychotherapy.
Online resource:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-66036-9
ISBN:
9783030660369$q(electronic bk.)
Bilingualism, culture, and social justice in family therapy
Bilingualism, culture, and social justice in family therapy
[electronic resource] /edited by marcela polanco, Navid Zamani, Christina Da Hee Kim. - Cham :Springer International Publishing :2021. - xv, 96 p. :ill., digital ;24 cm. - AFTA SpringerBriefs in family therapy,2196-5528. - AFTA SpringerBriefs in family therapy..
Chapter 1. Therapeutic Latinx Chismorreo -- Chapter 2. Doing Justice with Street Farsi -- Chapter 3. Intersections of Asian Languages, Culture, and Professional Education: Where the Personal and Professional Intimately Collide -- Chapter 4. First Language Recognition and Identities: An Italian perspective -- Chapter 5. Black Speak in Therapy -- Chapter 6. Working as a Team: Doing Therapy with Interpreters -- Chapter 7. Traversing Languages for Agency in the Practice of Trauma Work -- Chapter 8. Legitimizing Comadre Terapia: Postmodern Practices in the Linguistic and Cultural Borderlands -- Chapter 9. Linguistic identities of bilingual MFTs: Practicing across the borders of Spanish and English -- Chapter 10. The Road to Bilingual Supervision -- Chapter 11. Tejiendo Nuevos Horizontes Linguisticos/Weaving New Linguistic Horizons.
This volume advocates for justice in language rights through its explorations of bilingualism in family therapy, from the perspectives of eighteen languages identified by the authors: Black Talk/Ebonics/Slang, Farsi, Fenglish, Arabic, Italian, Cantonese Chinese, South Korean, Mandarin Chinese, Vietnamese, Spanish, Chilean Spanish, Mexican Spanish, Colombian Spanglish, Madrileno Spanish, Spanglish, Pocho Spanish, Colloquial Spanish, and English. It identifies standard English as the current language most often used across family therapy programs and services in the United States. The book discusses efforts to respond to the rapidly changing linguistic landscape and the increasingly high demand for appropriate therapy services that respond effectively to diverse families in America. It discusses recruitment and training of linguistically diverse family therapists and strategies to promote linguistic equality to support the rights of family therapists, their practices, and the communities they serve. Chapters explore ways to integrate languages in professional and personal lives, including the improvisational, self-taught translanguaging skills and practices that go beyond the lexical and grammatical rules of a language. The book describes the creative use of native or heritage languages to ensure that the juxtaposition of English therapeutic and daily-life landscapes is integrated into family therapy settings. It discusses contextual, relational, therapeutic, and training potential offered by bilingualism as well as the necessary transmutations in theory and practice. This volume is an essential resource for clinicians, therapists, and practitioners as well as researchers, professors, and graduate students in family studies, clinical psychology, and public health as well as all interrelated disciplines.
ISBN: 9783030660369$q(electronic bk.)
Standard No.: 10.1007/978-3-030-66036-9doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
179544
Family psychotherapy.
LC Class. No.: RC488.5 / .B555 2021
Dewey Class. No.: 616.89156
Bilingualism, culture, and social justice in family therapy
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Chapter 1. Therapeutic Latinx Chismorreo -- Chapter 2. Doing Justice with Street Farsi -- Chapter 3. Intersections of Asian Languages, Culture, and Professional Education: Where the Personal and Professional Intimately Collide -- Chapter 4. First Language Recognition and Identities: An Italian perspective -- Chapter 5. Black Speak in Therapy -- Chapter 6. Working as a Team: Doing Therapy with Interpreters -- Chapter 7. Traversing Languages for Agency in the Practice of Trauma Work -- Chapter 8. Legitimizing Comadre Terapia: Postmodern Practices in the Linguistic and Cultural Borderlands -- Chapter 9. Linguistic identities of bilingual MFTs: Practicing across the borders of Spanish and English -- Chapter 10. The Road to Bilingual Supervision -- Chapter 11. Tejiendo Nuevos Horizontes Linguisticos/Weaving New Linguistic Horizons.
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This volume advocates for justice in language rights through its explorations of bilingualism in family therapy, from the perspectives of eighteen languages identified by the authors: Black Talk/Ebonics/Slang, Farsi, Fenglish, Arabic, Italian, Cantonese Chinese, South Korean, Mandarin Chinese, Vietnamese, Spanish, Chilean Spanish, Mexican Spanish, Colombian Spanglish, Madrileno Spanish, Spanglish, Pocho Spanish, Colloquial Spanish, and English. It identifies standard English as the current language most often used across family therapy programs and services in the United States. The book discusses efforts to respond to the rapidly changing linguistic landscape and the increasingly high demand for appropriate therapy services that respond effectively to diverse families in America. It discusses recruitment and training of linguistically diverse family therapists and strategies to promote linguistic equality to support the rights of family therapists, their practices, and the communities they serve. Chapters explore ways to integrate languages in professional and personal lives, including the improvisational, self-taught translanguaging skills and practices that go beyond the lexical and grammatical rules of a language. The book describes the creative use of native or heritage languages to ensure that the juxtaposition of English therapeutic and daily-life landscapes is integrated into family therapy settings. It discusses contextual, relational, therapeutic, and training potential offered by bilingualism as well as the necessary transmutations in theory and practice. This volume is an essential resource for clinicians, therapists, and practitioners as well as researchers, professors, and graduate students in family studies, clinical psychology, and public health as well as all interrelated disciplines.
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Behavioral Science and Psychology (SpringerNature-41168)
based on 0 review(s)
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電子館藏
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1 records • Pages 1 •
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000000196159
電子館藏
1圖書
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EB RC488.5 .B595 2021 2021
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1 records • Pages 1 •
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https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-66036-9
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