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E-raamat: Art-Making with Refugees and Survivors: Creative and Transformative Responses to Trauma After Natural Disasters, War and Other Crises

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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Mar-2018
  • Kirjastus: Jessica Kingsley Publishers
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781784505189
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Mar-2018
  • Kirjastus: Jessica Kingsley Publishers
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781784505189

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This book explores how creativity and the expressive arts can be therapeutic for refugees and survivors of natural disasters, poverty, war, pandemic and genocide. Artists and therapists behind group art projects worldwide reveal how art enables people to come together, find their voices and learn how to narrate their stories after traumatic experiences. They offer insight into the challenges they encountered and explain the theory, curricula and practice of their approaches. The case studies reflect a wide range of projects, including work with survivors of the HIV/AIDS pandemic in South Africa, Syrian war refugees in Jordan and survivors of the tsunami in Sri Lanka.

This timely book reveals the therapeutic effect group art projects can have when working with survivors and refugees of war, natural disaster, poverty, pandemic and genocide. Artists and therapists who have worked with trauma internationally explain the theory and practice of their approaches and provide inspiration for others working in this area.

Arvustused

This global spectrum of artworks addressing public and environmental health confirms how art heals everywhere by transforming afflictions into affirmations of life, all amplified by creating in community. Sally Adnams Jones and her contributors show how every person and place makes unique and necessary contributions to the larger creation that holds us all--with art offering proof of these outcomes. -- Shaun McNiff, author of 'Art Heals', 'Art as Medicine', 'Art-Based Research' and 'Imagination in Action' A testament to the power of imagination, the creative process and the arts for individual, community and social healing. Sally Adnams Jones brings together examples of idiosyncratic approaches while at the same time presents a broad spectrum of common perspectives. This book introduces readers to the challenges and inspirations that are inherent in socially engaged work. -- Debra Kalmanowitz, PhD, co-author of 'The Portable Studio: Art Therapy and Political Conflict' and 'Art Therapy and Political Violence: With Art, Without Illusion'

Muu info

How art projects can be used to help refugees following international crises and natural disasters
1 Introduction
7(14)
2 Mapping Personal and Socio-Political Trauma, Including Current Global Migration Patterns
21(16)
3 How Creativity and the Expressive Arts Transform Individual Trauma
37(14)
4 How Creativity and the Expressive Arts Transform Social Trauma
51(14)
5 Stories from Philadelphia, Kenya and Rwanda, with Survivors of Poverty, Inner City Violence and Genocide
Lily Yeh and the Barefoot Artists organization
65(48)
6 Stories from South Africa, with Survivors of Poverty, Patriarchy and the HIV/AIDS Pandemic
Dr. Carol Hofmeyr and the Keiskamma Trust Art Project
113(34)
7 Stories from Palestine, Israel, Turkey, Syria, Jordan, India, France and Greece, with Survivors of Poverty and Ideological Violence, and those Living in Refugee Camps
Max Levi Frieder and the Artolution Project
147(64)
8 Stories from Canada and Sri Lanka, with Survivors of Ethnic Conflict, Religious Intolerance, Tsunami and the Effects of Globalization
Paul Hogan and the Butterfly Peace Garden
211(56)
9 Stories from Canada, with Survivors of Cultural Genocide, Neo-Colonial Racism and Inter-Generational Trauma
Dr. Sally Adndms Jones, TransformArta, Expressive Arts Therapy
267(22)
10 Conclusions about Healing Trauma and Learning to Transform through Creativity
289(14)
Contributors 303(2)
References 305(12)
Subject Index 317(6)
Author Index 323
Sally Adnams Jones is Director of TransformArta and has taught art education at The University of Victoria, Canada. Her PhD research explored how survivors of the HIV/AIDs pandemic in Africa transformed through their art practice.