Believing in Make-Believe: Looking at Theater as a Metaphor for Psychotherapy |
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Authors: | TERRY MacCORMACK |
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Affiliation: | Doctoral student, Department of Psychology, University of Ottawa. Send correspondence to 19 Marielle Court, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K2B 8P3. |
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Abstract: | In this essay, I explore the theatrical dimensions of psychotherapy. I argue that many of the historical, practice-related, and conceptual connections between theater and therapy often are only alluded to in the literature, but rarely made explicit. In doing so, however, it seems apparent that, as a metaphor for psychotherapy, theater perhaps offers a more appropriate fit than those narrative and conversational metaphors that have been employed so far. Proposing that theater is, in fact, the metaphor on which psychotherapy bases itself, I briefly examine some of its implications for how therapy might be conceptualized and performed. I conclude by inviting other therapists to consider — by openly acknowledging theater as a metaphor for psychotherapy — if they might then become more engaging, creative, and imaginative in their work. |
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