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Psicologia Clínica
versão impressa ISSN 0103-5665versão On-line ISSN 1980-5438
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ROMITE, Paula e RASERA, Emerson Fernando. COLLECTIVE NARRATIVE PRACTICES AS PSYCHOSOCIAL CARE: A LITERATURE REVIEW. Psicol. clin. [online]. 2024, vol.36, e001. Epub 02-Dez-2024. ISSN 0103-5665. https://doi.org/10.33208/pc1980-5438v036e001.
“Collective narrative practices” aim to serve individuals, groups and communities that experience or have experienced significant collective suffering, thus contributing to social movement and minimizing psychological colonization. This study analyzed how collective narrative practices are being carried out as psychosocial care interventions. A literature review was undertaken in scientific databases, in the period until 2021, which resulted in the selection of 39 articles. The quantitative-qualitative and thematic analyses showed that: there is a wide range of uses of collective narrative practices; they are developed by coordinators, in contexts and for populations different from those proposed by the creators of such practices; the problem focus highlights the social basis of suffering; the view of change is focused on the participants as individuals; and psychological colonization is counteracted by valuing the participants’ knowledge. In conclusion, the review demonstrated that collective narrative practices are being developed similarly to group narrative therapy, and indicates the importance of improving interventions that enable collective engagement and social transformation.
Palavras-chave : collective narrative practices; literature review; community.