Though Michael White has been
        one of the seminal figures in founding narrative therapy, the
        details of his own personal narrative -- as opposed to the development
        of his ideas regarding therapy -- are hard to come by. White's
        first career involved mechanical drafting, a profession he abandoned
        to study social work and, particularly, family therapy. Over
        the years he has been resident in Adelaide, Australia where the
        Dulwich Centre
        (at which he is co-director) has served as a home base for therapeutic
        practice, training, and writing.
        Hart (1995) proposes that White's
        therapeutic career developed in three phases. During Phase I--up
        to mid 1980s-- White was heavily influenced by the work of Gregory
        Bateson, his system of "Strategic Therapy," and the
        general notions of cybernetics. White's now familiar formulation
        of "externalizing the problem" arose at this time when
        he was predominantly concerned with helping clients in solving
        the major problems of their lives. The late 1980s brought a second
        phase to his work as White moved to articulate a more person-centered
        approach emphasizing meaning construction and narrative while,
        at the same time, developing a deeper appreciation for the social
        construction of reality and issues of social justice. White becomes
        concerned with "reauthoring lives" rather than more
        simply solving problems. By the beginning of the 1990s, a matured
        narrative therapy with strong links to many themes in postmodernism
        has served as White's concern. The work of Michel
        Foucault has served as an important influence on the later
        theorizing of White (e.g., White, 2002) although White adopts
        a more positive and possibity-filled understanding of power relationships
        in the modern world than Foucault did.
        
        
Selected Bibliography
        Bubenzer, D. L., & West,
        J. D. (1994). Michael White and the narrative perspective in
        therapy. Family Journal, 2(1), 71-84.
        Hart, B. (1995). Re-authoring
        the stories we work by: Situating the narrative approach in the
        presence of the family of therapists. Australian and New Zealand
        Journal of Family Therapy, 16(4), 181-189. [Online
        version]
        Munro, C., (1987). White and
        the cybernetic therapies: New of difference. Australian and
        New Zealand Journal of Family Therapy, 8 (4), 183-192.
        White, M. (1987). Family therapy
        and schizophrenia: Addressing the "in-the-corner" lifestyle.
        Dulwich Centre Newsletter, Spring, 14-21.
        White, M. (1988). The process
        of questioning: A therapy of literary merit. Dulwich Centre
        Newsletter, Winter, 8-14.
        White, M. (1989a). The externalizing
        of the problem and the re-authoring of lives and relationships.
        Dulwich Centre Newsletter, Summer, 3-20.
        White, M. (1989b). Selected
        papers. Adelaide, Australia: Dulwich Centre Publications.
        White, M. (1992). Deconstruction
        and therapy. In D. Epston & M. White, M., Experience,
        contradiction, narrative, and imagination--Selected papers of
        David Epston and Michael White, 1989-1991. Adelaide, Australia:
        Dulwich Centre Publications.
        White, M. (1995). Re-authoring
        lives: Interviews and essays. Adelaide, Australia: Dulwich
        Centre Publications.
        White, M. (2000). Reflections
        on narrative practices: Essays and interviews. Adelaide,
        Australia: Dulwich Centre Publications.
        White, M. (2002). Addressing
        personal failure. International Journal of Narrative Therapy
        and Community Work, Issue #3, 33-76.