1996
DOI: 10.1177/1066480796041002
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The Use of Genograms with SolutionBased and Narrative Therapies

Abstract: Most psychotherapies orient around a particular time focus. Some em-phasize a historical perspective while others attend to the here-and-now.A growing number of contemporary therapies arefocusing on thefutureas well. This article demonstrates how combining solution-based andnarrative techniques with genogram construction spans all three temporalfoci-past, present, and future-allowing therapists greater opportunity to attend to the diversity of perspectives brought by clients.

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Cited by 18 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…Mention of a specific technique of genogram, M a n u s c r i p t associated with solution-based (Kuehl, 1996) and family therapies (Jolly, Froom & Rosen, 1980), indicated perceived appropriateness of incorporating tools supporting exploration of the issue of time during therapy. Similar motivation seemed to be associated with the use of comic strips, found, for example, in art therapy for autism (Epp, 2008).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mention of a specific technique of genogram, M a n u s c r i p t associated with solution-based (Kuehl, 1996) and family therapies (Jolly, Froom & Rosen, 1980), indicated perceived appropriateness of incorporating tools supporting exploration of the issue of time during therapy. Similar motivation seemed to be associated with the use of comic strips, found, for example, in art therapy for autism (Epp, 2008).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As Kuehl (1996) and Chrzastowski (2011) explain, the genogram creation is an opportunity to explore family stories with the invitation to reflect upon and re-author a person's role within that story. LSB methods suggest similar potential to these approaches, with the advantages of a more dynamic and playful interface.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dunn and Levitt (2000) note the trend in the specialization of genogram use to specific populations, issues, or presenting problems and its adaptation to different theoretical orientations, for instance, solution-oriented (Kuehl, 1996), cultural (Riagazio-DiGilio, Ivey, Grady, & Kunkler-Peck, 2005;Warde, 2012), and spiritual genograms (Hodge & Limb, 2010;Kuehl, 1996). They differentiate between its use as primarily an information-gathering tool to organize data and track relationships, and the genogram as an approach in mutually collaborative, process-oriented explorations that foster an empathic relationship and support the telling of stories suited to social constructionist approaches.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Voor een goed overzicht van het gebruik van een genogram in gezinstherapie verwijzen we naar het standaardwerk van MacGoldrick & Gerson (1999). Bij het oplossingsgericht werken met genogrammen kan men in de familiegeschiedenis op zoek gaan naar de sterktes en de mogelijkheden of hulpbronnen (resources) van clie¨nten en gezinnen (Berg, 1994;Hillewaere & Le Fevere de Ten Hove, in druk;Kuehl, 1995Kuehl, , 1996Thomas, 1995). Door gezamenlijk met het oog op een hoopvollere toekomst een genogram te maken cree¨ren wij tevens een holding environment voor het gezin.…”
Section: Het Genogramunclassified