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Children at Play: Clinical and Developmental Approaches to Meaning and Representation [Kõva köide]

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  • Formaat: Hardback, 328 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 580 g, line figures, tables, bibliography
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Jan-1994
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0195044142
  • ISBN-13: 9780195044140
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 328 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 580 g, line figures, tables, bibliography
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Jan-1994
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0195044142
  • ISBN-13: 9780195044140
Teised raamatud teemal:
As they play, children do more than imagine - they also invent life-long approaches to thinking, feeling, and relating to other people. For nearly a century, clinical psychologists have been concerned with the content and interpersonal meaning of play. More recently, developmental psychologists have concentrated on the links between the emergence of symbolic play and evolving thought and language. At last, this volume bridges the gap between the two disciplines by defining their common interests and by developing areas of interface and interrelatedness. The editors have brought together original chapters by distinguished psychoanalysts, clinical psychologists, social workers, and developmental psychologists who shed light on topics outside the traditional confines of their respective domains. Thus the book features clinicians exploring subjects such as play representation, narrative, metaphor, and symbolization, and developmentalists examining questions regarding affect, social development, conflict, and psychopathology. Taken together, the contributors offer a rich, integrative view of the many dimensions of early play as it occurs among peers, between parent and child, and in the context of therapy.

As they play, children do more than imagine--they also invent life-long approaches to thinking, feeling, and relating to other people. For nearly a century, clinical psychologists have been concerned with the content and interpersonal meaning of play. More recently, developmental psychologists have concentrated on the links between the emergence of symbolic play and evolving thought and language. At last, this volume bridges the gap between the two disciplines by defining their common interests and by developing areas of interface and interrelatedness. The editors have brought together original chapters by distinguished psychoanalysts, clinical psychologists, social workers, and developmental psychologists who shed light on topics outside the traditional confines of their respective domains. Thus the book features clinicians exploring subjects such as play representation, narrative, metaphor, and symbolization, and developmentalists examining questions regarding affect, social development, conflict, and psychopathology. Taken together, the contributors offer a rich, integrative view of the many dimensions of early play as it occurs among peers, between parent and child, and in the context of therapy.
PART I: AFFECT IN SYMBOLISM;
1. A Quantitative Approach to the Clinical
Assessment of 2- to 4-year-olds;
2. The Relationship Between Anxiety and
Pretend Play;
3. Play, Cure, and Development: A Developmental Perspective on
the Psychoanalytic Treatment of Young Children;
4. Constructing Metaphors:
The Role of Symbolization in the Treatment of Children;
5. Making Meaning and
Making Believe: Their Role in The Clinical process; PART II: RELATIONSHIPS
AND SYMBOLIZATION;
6. The Leaving Game, or I'll Play You and You'll Play Me:
The Emergence of the Capacity for Dramatic Role Play in Two-year-olds;
7.
Self-Other Action Play: A Window into the Represenatational World of the
Infant;
8. Play: A Context for Mutual Regulation Within Mother-Child
Interaction; PART III: DIFFERENCES AND DISTORTIONS IN SYMBOLIC FUNCTIONING;
9. Windows on Social Worlds: Gender Differences in Children's Play
Narratives;
10. He's a Nice Alligator: Observations on the Affective
Organization of Pretense;
11. Symbolic Development in Children with Down
Syndrome and in Children with Autism;
12. Development of Symbolic Play of
Deaf Children Ages One to Three;
13. Play and Narrative in Inhibited
Children;
14. Symbolic Play in the Interactions of Young Children and their
Mothers with a History of Affective Illness; INDEX