The Connectivity Bridge – A Clinical Understanding: Postcolonial Therapy with Latinx Women Living in the United States

IF 1.1 4区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Carmen Inoa Vazquez
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Abstract

Abstract The negative effects brought by intergenerational trauma affecting Latinx women that transmits across generations has not received the appropriate attention that recognizes the cumulative emotional and psychological wounding brought by the experience of migration associated with the legacies of colonialism, political violence, and related stressors. Intergenerational trauma can be recognized and ameliorated with the application of postcolonial psychotherapy modalities that endorse the relevance of cultural representation, identity, and location, with specific reference to migration, gender, race, and ethnicity that focus on promoting liberation and healing. This article will address the interconnections (The Connectivity Bridge) between gender specific cultural values and/or national narratives that perpetuate the colonial thinking of superiority vs inferiority, based on gender and/or ethnicity, and the creation of negative self-identifications evidenced by many Latinx women. A clinical application will briefly illustrate the existing relationship between postcolonialism, ancestry, feminism, and the migration experience that can affect Latinx women living in the United States. Four cultural expectations of gender specific behaviors with ties to colonialism endorsed by Latinxs will be discussed, namely machismo, marianismo, attitudinal familismo or the feeling of support one expects from family, and simpatia, a cultural relational script that also carries gender specific behavioral expectations. An application of a liberation/decolonization healing approach will also illustrate and challenge the assumptions that gender specific expectations of behavior are antiquated and no longer relevant to modern Latinx women with a history of migration, born or residing in the United States who continue being affected by a continuation of the traumatic effects of the previously suffered oppression in the country of origin for many Latinx women and their descendants.
连接桥——临床理解:美国拉丁裔女性的后殖民治疗
摘要影响拉丁裔妇女的代际创伤所带来的负面影响代代相传,但尚未得到适当的关注,因为人们认识到移民经历带来的累积情感和心理伤害与殖民主义、政治暴力和相关压力源的遗产有关。代际创伤可以通过应用后殖民心理治疗模式来识别和改善,这些模式认可文化代表性、身份和地点的相关性,特别是移民、性别、种族和族裔,重点是促进解放和治愈。这篇文章将探讨特定性别的文化价值观和/或民族叙事之间的相互联系(连接桥),这些文化价值观或民族叙事延续了基于性别和/或种族的优越与自卑的殖民思维,以及许多拉丁裔女性所证明的负面自我认同的产生。临床应用将简要说明后殖民主义、祖先、女权主义和移民经历之间的现有关系,这些关系可能会影响生活在美国的拉丁裔女性。将讨论拉丁裔支持的与殖民主义有关的四种特定性别行为的文化期望,即大男子主义、marianismo、态度家庭主义或期望从家庭获得支持的感觉,以及simpatia,一种也承载特定性别行为期望的文化关系脚本。解放/非殖民化治疗方法的应用也将说明并挑战这样一种假设,即特定性别的行为期望已经过时,与有移民史的现代拉丁裔女性不再相关,出生或居住在美国的许多拉丁裔妇女及其后代继续受到先前在原籍国遭受压迫的创伤影响。
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来源期刊
Women & Therapy
Women & Therapy Multiple-
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
4.80%
发文量
18
期刊介绍: Women & Therapy is the only professional journal that focuses entirely on the complex interrelationship between women and the therapeutic experience. Devoted to descriptive, theoretical, clinical, and empirical perspectives on the topic of women and therapy, the journal is intended for feminist practitioners as well as for individuals interested in the practice of feminist therapy. The journal focuses on a wide range of content areas, including: •issues in the process of therapy with female clients •problems in living that affect women in greater proportion than men, such as depression, eating disorders, and agoraphobia •women"s traditional and nontraditional roles in society and how these affect and can be affected by therapy.
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