Selected Product: | Voices of Color : First-Person Accounts of Ethnic Minority Therapists Paperback Edition: 1 Author: Elizabeth Wieling Publisher: Sage Publications, Inc Release Date: 2004-06-23 ISBN-10: 0761928901 ISBN-13: 9780761928904 List Price: $51.95 Average Customer Rating: | | The Practice of Emotionally Focused Couple Therapy: Creating Connection (Basic Principles Into Practice Series) ISBN-10: 0415945682 ISBN-13: 9780415945684 List Price:$34.95 Counseling the Culturally Diverse: Theory and Practice ISBN-10: 0470086327 ISBN-13: 9780470086322 List Price:$80.75 Ethnicity and Family Therapy, Third Edition ISBN-10: 1593850204 ISBN-13: 9781593850203 List Price:$85.00 Re-Visioning Family Therapy: Race, Culture, and Gender in Clinical Practice ISBN-10: 1572300272 ISBN-13: 9781572300279 List Price:$60.00 Explorations in Privilege, Oppression and Diversity ISBN-10: 0534517420 ISBN-13: 9780534517427 List Price:$74.95 |
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Voices of Color: First Person Accounts of Ethnic Minority Therapists is the first book to address the training, academic, and professional experiences of ethnic minority therapists. Using real cases, narratives, and biographical material, each chapter motivates the reader to ponder and challenge how issues related to mental health intersect with race/ethnicity within a broader diversity framework.
The contributors represent various mental health disciplines, and they all write from a systemic perspective on therapy cases, theory, new models, and research. The authors present powerful narratives of how their personal and professional experiences inform each other. These insider perspectives are placed within a broader systemic context highlighting the interplay between personal, academic, and professional political relationships and their symbiotic impact on individuals, families, and communities.
These combined voices of color add a new and significant perspective to the awareness of students, clinicians, educators, supervisors, and administrators regarding their personal position vis-à-vis psychotherapy, different multicultural dimensions, and social justice.
Required reading | Customer Rating: | | Hi, I am a psychology grad student. One of my professors recommended this book to me and I'm so glad I read it! This book describes the experiences of therapists of color in the real world. It was very interesting to read this because I hadn't come across a wonderful book like this before. I think this book will be an extremely valuable resource in work places with diversity. I recommend this book for all clinicians and students. | Giving "Voices of Color" a Voice | Customer Rating: | This book is for anyone interested in diversity. Most of the 19 chapters are written by university faculty and student therapists. However, the academic rigor should not discourage someone who wants to read compelling personal stories about race, culture, and ethnicity. The authors courageously share their own struggles with diversity issues, and these narratives educate the reader along the way. Therefore, the book will not only become an important textbook for students but will also provide a thoughtful forum for diversity discussions.
Patricia M. Cole, Associate Professor Graduate School of Humanities and Social Sciences Nova Southeastern University Ft. Lauderdale, FL | Terrific, one-of-a-kind | Customer Rating: | "Voices of Color" is a fascinating read. It is a collection of chapters written by ethnic minority therapists, all of whom have stories to share. The authors write about their personal background and how that impacts their current professional choices, and interests.
The book is interesting because it makes the connection between one's personal experiences and one's values, career paths and beliefs. Writers also reflect on real psychotherapy cases and other situations in their work that helped me understand subtle truths about race, ethnicity and privilege.
Most of the material is related to psychotherapy, but I found the book to be packed with eye-opening (sometimes painful) thoughts that are applicable to everyday life. I really liked the questions and exercises at the end of each chapter. While the book also contains theory and research for scholars interested in ethnicity, it is very accessible to non-therapists too.
In the end, I learned a lot about myself and my own attitudes towards diversity from this diverse set of writers reflecting on the meaning of their own ethnicity. |
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