The sudden, tragic death of He had a mercurial, puckish nature and an endlessly restless, questioning intelligence about anything and everything, particularly the complexities and peculiarities of human relationships. His influence over a generation of therapists has been profound. He loved to flirt with ideas and women (in fact, people generally).
Adelaide: Dulwich Centre Pub. The centerpiece of the launch edition was an in-depth interview with Gianfranco Cecchin, the irreverent, gentle Italian who, along with three other psychiatrists had, in the ’s formed what became known as the Milan school of family therapy.
This practical and enlightening book
Following Maturana, () Gianfranco () and our Swedish colleagues, Mia Andersson, the late Klas Grevelius and Ernst Salamon () we embraced love as curiosity and attempted to open space when presented with relationships based on symmetry and complementarity. This essay examines the systemic guiding An interview with Gianfranco Cecchin. Interview by John Soderlund. Gianfranco Cecchin might be described as irreverent. Much of his work over the past 30 years has been about criticising the way therapy is done. But none receives as vehement a criticism as his own.
It should be emphasized, however, Gianfranco Cecchin () Psychiatrist, as Boscolo worked in the States and came back to Milano Co-founder with Luigi Boscolo of the Milan Center of Family Therapy in via Leopardi 19, where they had started the first systemic training () and where they “translated” their thoughts to adhere to the public contexts in which the.
The evolution of family The term “Milan Approach” was coined by Lynn Hoffmann to identify the original contribution that Luigi Boscolo and Gianfranco Cecchin gave to systemic therapy.
Cecchin, Lane and Ray The sudden, tragic death of Gianfranco Cecchin, in February this year, deprived the world of one of its most inventive and creative therapists. For us, who witnessed most of the vicissitudes of the 'Milan Associates', the tragedy was twofold: it took Gianfranco, and it dismembered the twosome he constituted together with Luigi Boscolo.
Since this article is A different kind of accent. Boscolo: It’s also a difference of style. Recently a colleague made a musical comparison about us: he said that, seeing us at work, I reminded him of Verdi’s melodrama, Gianfranco of Mozart’s Singspiel. Cecchin: I will give you an example. Recently, I saw a client in individual therapy.