Volume 19, Issue 1 pp. 45-57
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The Greek Chorus and Other Techniques of Paradoxical Therapy

PEGGY PAPP A.C.S.W.

PEGGY PAPP A.C.S.W.

Ackerman Institute for Family Therapy, New York, N.Y.

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First published: March 1980
Citations: 136

Abstract

This paper has described some of the interventions developed at the Ackerman Brief Therapy Project in treating the families of symptomatic children. The interventions are based upon a differential diagnosis of the family system and upon an evaluation of that system's resistance to change. They are classified as compliance-based or defiance-based, depending upon the family's degree of anxiety, motivation, and resistance. Paradoxical interventions, which are defiance-based, are used as a clinical tool in dealing with resistance and circumventing the power struggle between therapist and family. A consultation group acting as a Greek chorus underlines the therapist's interventions and comments on the consequences of systemic change. This group is also sometimes used to form a therapeutic triangle among the family, therapist and group, with the therapist and group debating over the family's ability to change.

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