Description

Book Synopsis

This book lays out the model of psychohistoriography, which challenges dominant Eurocentric approaches to psychology and mental health, and includes a step by step process which professionals can use with clients of Caribbean or black and minority ethnic (BME) descent to explore issues around race, identity and culture.

Psychohistoriography takes the form of a model for group psychotherapy in which members of a particular group or community narrate their stories within the context of a pertinent cultural or historical issue. The process includes deep breathing and stretching exercises, large group analysis where discussion and storytelling is encouraged, and exercises which involve challenging dominant discourses of historical events. At the heart of this process is a 'matrix': a time line showing a chronological period with two threads – one showing the events described from a European perspective, and the other showing the same events from a BME perspective, teaching clients to challenge pre-conceived conceptions of history, and its grand narratives. The final stage is the production and performance of 'scripts', as part of a group sociodrama which helps clients understand and explore their feelings.

This book will be of use to therapists, counsellors, mental health professionals and social workers with clients of Caribbean or other black and minority ethnic origin.



Trade Review
As a psychotherapist with an interest in transcultural perspectives, I found its discussions about cultural sensitivity when working with clients from different heritages illuminating, relevant and powerful. I would recommend it to any practitioner seeking to broaden their understanding of these issues. -- Therapy Today

Table of Contents
1. Psychohistoriography and the Challenge to the Episteme: The Legacy of Caribbean Scholarship in the Development of Ethnopsychiatry. 2. The European-American Psychosis: A Psychohistoriographic Perspective of Contemporary Western Civilization. 3. The Early Origins of Cultural Therapy. 4. The Components of Psychohistoriographic Cultural Therapy. 5. Cultural Therapy as an Instrument of Social Psychotherapy. 6. Other Psychohistoriographic Cultural Therapy Projects. 7. Pyschohistoriographic Cultural Therapy: The Case Study in Montreal. 8. Psychohistoriographic Brief Psychotherapy: A Post-Colonial Model for Individual Reconstructive Psychotherapy. 9. Epilogue: On the Structure of the Mind. 10. Index.

Psychohistoriography: A Post-Colonial

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    A Paperback / softback by Frederick W. Hickling

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      View other formats and editions of Psychohistoriography: A Post-Colonial by Frederick W. Hickling

      Publisher: Jessica Kingsley Publishers
      Publication Date: 15/10/2012
      ISBN13: 9781849053570, 978-1849053570
      ISBN10: 184905357X

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This book lays out the model of psychohistoriography, which challenges dominant Eurocentric approaches to psychology and mental health, and includes a step by step process which professionals can use with clients of Caribbean or black and minority ethnic (BME) descent to explore issues around race, identity and culture.

      Psychohistoriography takes the form of a model for group psychotherapy in which members of a particular group or community narrate their stories within the context of a pertinent cultural or historical issue. The process includes deep breathing and stretching exercises, large group analysis where discussion and storytelling is encouraged, and exercises which involve challenging dominant discourses of historical events. At the heart of this process is a 'matrix': a time line showing a chronological period with two threads – one showing the events described from a European perspective, and the other showing the same events from a BME perspective, teaching clients to challenge pre-conceived conceptions of history, and its grand narratives. The final stage is the production and performance of 'scripts', as part of a group sociodrama which helps clients understand and explore their feelings.

      This book will be of use to therapists, counsellors, mental health professionals and social workers with clients of Caribbean or other black and minority ethnic origin.



      Trade Review
      As a psychotherapist with an interest in transcultural perspectives, I found its discussions about cultural sensitivity when working with clients from different heritages illuminating, relevant and powerful. I would recommend it to any practitioner seeking to broaden their understanding of these issues. -- Therapy Today

      Table of Contents
      1. Psychohistoriography and the Challenge to the Episteme: The Legacy of Caribbean Scholarship in the Development of Ethnopsychiatry. 2. The European-American Psychosis: A Psychohistoriographic Perspective of Contemporary Western Civilization. 3. The Early Origins of Cultural Therapy. 4. The Components of Psychohistoriographic Cultural Therapy. 5. Cultural Therapy as an Instrument of Social Psychotherapy. 6. Other Psychohistoriographic Cultural Therapy Projects. 7. Pyschohistoriographic Cultural Therapy: The Case Study in Montreal. 8. Psychohistoriographic Brief Psychotherapy: A Post-Colonial Model for Individual Reconstructive Psychotherapy. 9. Epilogue: On the Structure of the Mind. 10. Index.

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