Description
Foreword: Eureka! Discovering Gold in a Leaden World, Michelle LeBaron.; Part I: Principles.; 1. Art Opens to the World: Expressive Arts and Social Action, Stephen K. Levine.; 2. From Social Change to Art Therapy and Back Again: A Memoir, Ellen Levine.; 3. Social Activism within Expressive Arts ''Therapy'': What's in a Name? Karen Estrella.; 4. Communal Art-making and Conflict Transformation, Paolo Knill.; 5. From the Studio to the World: How Expressive Arts Therapy Can Help Further Social Change, Shaun McNiff.; Part II: Issues.; 6. A Social-Critical Reading of Indigenous Women's Art: The Use of Visual Data to 'Show,' rather than 'Tell,' of the Intersection of Different Layers of Oppression, Ephrat Huss.; 7. Inside-out Outside-in: Found Objects and Portable Studio, Debra Kalmanowitz and Bobby Lloyd.8. From Private Pain Toward Public Speech: Poetry Therapy with Iraqi Survivors of Torture and War, Shanee Stepakoff, Samer Hussein, Mariam Al-Salahat, Insherah Musa, Moath Asfoor, Eman. Al-Houdali, and Maysa Al-Hmouz.; Part III: Projects.; 9. The Choreography of Absence: (In)habiting the Imagination After War, Carrie MacLeod.; 10. Creating Space for Change: The Use of Expressive Arts with Vulnerable Children and Women Prisoners in Sub-Saharan Africa, Gloria Simoneaux.; 11. Beauty in the Rough Places, Karen Abbs.; 12. Art as a Gift: Expressive Arts in Bolivia, Sally Atkins.; 13. A Black Dog on a Green Meadow: Doing Expressive Arts Therapy in Peru: Some Headlines, TAE Peru (Judith Alalu, Jose Miguel Calderon, Ximena Maurial, Monica Prado, Martin Zavala).; 14. These Stories are Burning a Hole in my Brain: Using the Arts to Tell the Stories of the Ethiopian Jewish Immigrant Community in Israel, Vivien Marcow Speiser and Samuel Schwartz. Afterword: The Power of Poiesis, MaryBeth Morand.