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David Epston
Born (1944-08-30) 30 August 1944 (age 79)
Occupation(s)family therapist, author, social worker

David Epston (born 30 August 1944) is a New Zealand social worker and therapist, formerly co-director of the Family Therapy Centre in Auckland, New Zealand, formerly visiting professor at the John F. Kennedy University, formerly an honorary clinical lecturer in the Department of Social Work, University of Melbourne, and formerly an affiliate faculty member in the Ph.D program in Couple and Family Therapy at North Dakota State University. Epston and his late friend and colleague Michael White (social worker and psychotherapist) are known as originators of narrative therapy.

Early life and education

David Epston was born in Peterborough, Ontario, Canada, where he grew up. He left Canada in 1963 when he was 19, arriving in New Zealand in 1964.[ citation needed] where he attended University of Auckland(1964-1966)

Career in family therapy

In New Zealand Epston started working as a senior social worker in an Auckland hospital. From 1981 to 1987 he worked as consultant family therapist at the Leslie Centre, run by Presbyterian Support Services in Auckland. From 1987 to 2019 he was co-director of The Family Therapy Centre in Auckland. [1]

In the late 1970s Epston and Michael White led the flowering of family therapy within Australia and New Zealand. [1] Together they started developing their ideas, continuing during the 1980s, and eventually in 1990 published Narrative Means to Therapeutic Ends, the first major text in what came to be known as narrative therapy. In 1997 following the publication of Playful Approaches to Serious Problems Epston, along with his co-authors Dean Lobovits and Jennifer Freeman, initiated the website Narrative Approaches. [2] It includes series of authored and co-authored papers, artwork, and poetry in the form of an "Archive of Resistance: Anti-Anorexia/anti-Bulimia."

Publications

  • 1989. Literate Means to Therapeutic Ends. With Michael White. Adelaide: Dulwich Centre Publications.
  • 1990. Narrative Means to Therapeutic Ends. With Michael White. W.W. Norton.
  • 1992. Experience, Contradiction, Narrative and Imagination: Selected papers of David Epston & Michael White, 1989-1991. With Michael White. Adelaide, South Australia: Dulwich Centre Publications.
  • 1997. Playful approaches to serious problems: narrative therapy with children and their families. With Jennifer Freeman and Dean Lobovits. W.W. Norton.
  • 2004. Biting the hand that starves you: inspiring resistance to anorexia/bulimia. With Richard Linn Maisel and Ali Borden. W.W. Norton.
  • 2008. Down under and up over: travels with narrative therapy. Edited by Barry Bowen. Karnac Books. ISBN  978-0-9523433-1-8

2016: with David Marsten and Laurie Markham. Narrative Therapy in Wonderland: Connecting with Children's Imaginative Know-how, W.W. Norton 2017: with Wiremu NiaNia and Allister Bush. Collaborative and Indigenous Mental Health Therapy: Taitahono: Stories of Maori Healing and Psychiatry, Routledge 2022: with Travis Heath and Tom Carlson. Reimagining Narrative Therapy through Practice Stories and Auto Ethnography. Routledge.

References

  1. ^ a b Susanna Chamberlain (2001). A tale of narrative therapy Archived 7 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed 6 October 2009.
  2. ^ "Narrative Approaches - Valuing Our Experiences, Living Our Stories". Narrative Approaches. Archived from the original on 30 March 2014. Retrieved 8 June 2019.

External links