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With respect to prejudice.

Begum Maitra1

  • 1London.

The Journal of Analytical Psychology
|March 14, 2019
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Psychotherapy

Keywords:
JungPsychotherapieausbildungRasseSupervisionVorurteilassunti culturalicultural biasformación psicoterapéuticaformation des psychothérapeuteskulturelle Voreingenommenheitpregiudizioprejudiceprejuicioprejuicio culturalpréjugés culturelspréjugés racistes et autrespsychotherapy trainingracerazarazzasupervisionsupervisionesupervisióntraining psicoterapeuticoЮнгкультурные пристрастияпредубеждениепсихотерапевтический тренинграсасупервизия心理治疗训练成见文化偏见督导种族荣格

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Area of Science:

  • Psychology
  • Cultural Studies

Background:

  • Psychotherapy's foundational principles are rooted in Western cultural contexts and historical periods.
  • This historical context includes eras of European global dominance, characterized by conquest, colonization, and enslavement.
  • Racialized biases from these historical periods may persist in contemporary psychotherapeutic training and practice.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To examine the lingering effects of historical racialized biases within psychotherapy.
  • To explore how these biases impact psychotherapeutic training and practice.
  • To consider the implications for multicultural populations and the perception of psychotherapy in non-Western contexts.

Main Methods:

  • Analysis of the author's professional and personal experiences.
  • Review of literature from outside the Jungian canon.
  • Examination of how racialized biases may be perpetuated in psychotherapeutic thought and practice.

Main Results:

  • Historical racialized biases can subtly influence current psychotherapeutic assumptions and methods.
  • These biases limit the effectiveness of psychotherapy in diverse Western populations.
  • The perpetuation of bias risks psychotherapy being perceived as a form of neo-colonialism globally.

Conclusions:

  • Psychotherapists, particularly Jungians, should critically examine their own potential biases.
  • Addressing these ingrained prejudices is crucial for enhancing psychotherapy's relevance and ethical standing.
  • Awareness and deconstruction of bias are necessary for equitable and effective therapeutic practice in a globalized world.