This text is intended to help social work practitioners move beyond both these often-accepted constructions of sexuality and the range of methods that are available to social workers in their clinical practice. Various themes are apparent throughout each of the chapters in this volume: the range of sexual experience and expression that exists across individuals; a recognition of our society’s responses to expressions of sexuality, including the social, attitudinal, and cultural barriers that inhibit the expression of healthy sexuality and that constrain our approaches to assisting individuals with their recovery from trauma; the need to consistently and painstakingly examine our own assumptions relating to sexuality in order to be more effective with our clients; and the delicate balance that is often required when working with clients around issues of sexuality in the context of institutions, community, and societal structures.
İçerik tablosu
Embodying Identity: Using Movement-Based Techniques to Explore Body.-Engendering Self through Monologue and Performance: Helping Your Clients Explore Identity and Sexuality.-The Use of Poetry Therapy for the Treatment of Sexual Abuse Trauma.-Masks, Wounds, and Bridges: Expressive Arts Therapy with Sexual Abusers.-Exploring Gender Identity with Photography: A Multi-Level Treatment Approach.-Understanding Clients with Alternative Expressions of Sexuality Using Music.-Hearing Myself: Songs and Improvisation with Inner-City Adolescents Who Have Experienced Sexual Abuse.-Sandplay Therapy: A Way of Rediscovering Inner Wisdom in the Body and Psyche.-Sandplay as Alchemical Vessel: Healing Sexual Trauma and Drug Addiction.
Yazar hakkında
Sana Loue, J.D., Ph.D., M.P.H., M.S.S.A. is a professor at Case Western Reserve University. She holds a primary appointment in the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics in the School of Medicine and secondary appointments in the Departments of Bioethics, Global Health, and Psychiatry, as well as in the Mandel School of Applied Social Services, the university’s school of social worker. Her empirical research focuses on HIV risk and prevention in minority communities, family violence, and mental illness, while her more theoretical research includes forensic epidemiology and research ethics. As a licensed social worker, she offers counseling services through a local AIDS organization to minority young adults with issues ranging from partner violence, childhood sexual abuse and trauma, gender and sexual orientation questioning, self-injurious behaviors, and severe mental illness.