From genogram to genograph: using narrative means to contextualize social reality in the counselling session
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Date
2006Author
Van Niekerk, P J M
Van Niekerk, R L
Mushonga, H
Dogger, A
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This article addresses a process that occurs when applying narrative therapy
during a counselling session, namely moving away from the genogram towards the
more effective genograph. Narrative therapy implies that we often talk and share stories
about ourselves and that these stories are usually within a social context, whether it
is our families, personal relationships or work. Stories are an important aspect in
narrative therapy and therefore the counsellor must be aware of a family’s different
contexts both as a family system, and as a group of individual members. The article
takes as point of departure the thoughts of Charles Horton Cooley and George Herbert
Mead and their influence on the development of the ‘self’ and the construction of our
social reality within this process. It further argues in favour of the use of a genograph
as a symbolic representation of the personal meanings of a family member’s experience
of the dominant and alternative stories with which they live.