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- Aesthetic disclosure in film (1)
- Bibliotherapy (1)
- Brain maps in film (1)
- Dean Barnlund (1)
- Episodic events in supernatural films (1)
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- Film as prayer (1)
- Helping professions (1)
- Heuristics (1)
- How to write a realistic and modern Christian screenplay (1)
- Intervention design (1)
- John Dewey (1)
- Louise Rosenblatt (1)
- Metaxu in film (1)
- Moral therapy (1)
- Multi-grounded action research (1)
- Phenomenological study of Christian messages in film (1)
- Philosophical perspective of Christian messages in film (1)
- Professional writing (1)
- Screenplay Ruthie's Game (1)
- Serious mental illness (1)
- The power of film inspires Christian thought (1)
- Transcendence in film (1)
- Writing for the 21st century (1)
Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Bibliotherapy In The Helping Professions: A Heuristic Model For Intervention Design, Natalie Marie Haney
Bibliotherapy In The Helping Professions: A Heuristic Model For Intervention Design, Natalie Marie Haney
Masters Theses
I propose a new approach to examining bibliotherapy’s usefulness in the community-based care of individuals with serious mental illness (SMI), focused on producing a heuristic that benefits helping professionals who offer non-clinical and non-psychiatric services. Meant for writers designing bibliotherapy interventions in the helping professions, I conceptualize bibliotherapy in a model against the backdrop of community-based care’s history. A model has the potential to allow each writer to conduct situation-specific inquiry, invent bibliotherapy intervention designs suited to the unique needs of the profession’s help-seekers, and reflect on knowledge generated for intervention reiteration. Referring to Dewey, Rosenblatt and Barnlund to create …
How The Power Of Film Inspires Christianity, Stephanie Mullins Sellers
How The Power Of Film Inspires Christianity, Stephanie Mullins Sellers
Masters Theses
Ruthie’s Game is a screenplay designed to repeat supernatural episodic events, which, according to research, may act as foundations for faith systems because watching films is a prayerful act, and the more it is repeated the longer the brain stores the memory. The thesis explores how Christian messages are received through film with a brief on the science behind the brain’s activities and how it reflexes film’s episodic events for later use. Testimonies, interviews, and personal comments show an audience seeking secular films with intellectual storyline and with no preaching to the choir. Ruthie’s Game shares Christian messages in an …