Skip to product information
1 of 1

Becoming an Agent

Regular price £72.50
Sale price £72.50 Regular price £72.50
Sale Sold out
This book is about individuals who have made dramatic changes in their lives. In the beginning, these people were living as patients or victims of circumstance. In the end, they were living as agen...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 07 December 1993
View Product Details

This book is about individuals who have made dramatic changes in their lives. In the beginning, these people were living as patients or victims of circumstance. In the end, they were living as agents, free to shape the courses of their lives, to choose, set goals, plan-to make things happen, rather than to experience life as events happening to them.

The authors describe what is involved in such remarkable transformations. They identify a common structure of transformation involving four distinguishable phases. They also clarify a progressive dialectic between living the plot of a patient and living the plot of an agent, and show how an old plot is destroyed or deconstructed and a new plot is constructed.

files/i.png Icon
Price: £72.50
Pages: 186
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Publication Date: 07 December 1993
ISBN: 9780791417195
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

REVIEWS Icon

"The topic may be the central issue in personality and counseling today. The perspective, namely the narrative paradigm, is emerging as the vantage point drawing the most discourse in the social sciences as we head for the turn of the century.

"Cochran is the leading voice in the move of career psychology to reform itself into an interpretive discipline. His accumulated achievements in applying the narrative paradigm to career development and counseling represent the most innovative and important contribution of a single scholar to contemporary career theory." — Mark L. Savickas, Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine

Preface

1. Personal Agency

2. Enhancing Agency

3. Phases of Transformation

4. Themes of Passage

5. Scenes of Destruction

6. A Narrative of Agency

Bibliography

Index