On machismo, grief abreactions, and mexican culture: The case of mr. x, the counselor, and the curandera

Jesse R. Aros, Paul Buckingham, X. Rodriguez
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

Abstract A single case study examines the use of a curandera (Mexican folk healer) in helping a 22-year-old traditional first-generation raza (an in-group reference for identifying a Mexican individual of full or partial indigenous Mesoamerican heritage) male undergraduate student in a mid-sized city in the southwestern United States resolve grief issues. This article assesses the possible linkage between grief abreaction based on an atypical response to socio cultural gender expectancies relative to machismo (socially sanctioned Mexican male scripts for “gender-appropriate” behavior, identification, and role evaluations) and individually based universal grieving needs (Kubler-Ross, 1969; Parry, 1990, Salcido, 1990). It is posited that Mexican American mental health professionals may not always be viewed as sanctioned change agents by raza clients. Justifications and a need to examine and include traditional healers are briefly presented. A call for further exploration/ application of this practice is issued.
论大男子主义、悲伤宣泄和墨西哥文化:x先生、咨询师和怪人的案例
一项单一案例研究考察了curandera(墨西哥民间治疗师)在美国西南部一个中等城市帮助一名22岁的传统第一代raza(一种识别具有全部或部分土著中美洲遗产的墨西哥人的群体内参考)男性本科生解决悲伤问题的使用。本文评估了基于对社会文化性别期望的非典型反应的悲伤发泄与大男子主义(社会认可的墨西哥男性“性别适当”行为、认同和角色评估的脚本)和基于个体的普遍悲伤需求之间的可能联系(Kubler-Ross, 1969;Parry, 1990; Salcido, 1990)。据推测,墨西哥裔美国人的心理健康专业人员可能并不总是被raza客户视为认可的变革推动者。简要介绍了审查和包括传统治疗师的理由和需要。呼吁进一步探索/应用这一做法。
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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