‘Don’t ask, don’t tell’: LGB invisibility and heterosexism in clinical psychology textbooks

Dwayne Schanz, Valory Mitchell
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This paper reports a qualitative, hermeneutically informed, analysis of three clinical psychology textbooks published in North America and used in postgraduate psychology programmes in California universities. These texts are viewed as cultural products reflecting the intersection between homosexuality and psychology in Western culture. The impact on the reader/clinician of explicit, implicit, and excluded material about lesbian, gay and bisexual (LGB) people is considered. We conclude that, mainly by excluding LGB content, but also by occasionally presenting problematic constructions of LGB people, these textbooks express a contradiction: professional psychology in the US espouses pro-LGB ethics and advocacy, yet it co-operates with anti-LGB cultural, economic, and political forces. Possible reasons for this are considered. Educators and students are urged to take a leading role in confronting the heterosexism of textbooks, through teaching and learning how to question cultural bias.
“不问,不说”:临床心理学教科书中的LGB隐形和异性恋
本文报告了一份定性的、解释学的报告,分析了北美出版的三本临床心理学教科书,并在加州大学的研究生心理学课程中使用。这些文本被视为反映西方文化中同性恋与心理学交叉的文化产物。考虑到关于女同性恋、男同性恋和双性恋(LGB)人群的显性、隐性和被排除的材料对读者/临床医生的影响。我们的结论是,这些教科书主要通过排除LGB内容,但也偶尔出现LGB人的问题结构,表达了一种矛盾:美国的职业心理学支持支持LGB的伦理和倡导,但它与反LGB的文化,经济和政治力量合作。考虑了可能的原因。教育工作者和学生应该通过教授和学习如何质疑文化偏见,带头反对教科书中的异性恋主义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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