Book Review: The secret life of secrets: How our inner worlds shape well-being, relationships, and who we are

IF 2.5 2区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
V. Bianchi, Katharine H. Greenaway
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Kassan and Moodley are well positioned to provide a critical perspective on counseling, psychology, and psychotherapy practices that are born out of White, European psychological traditions. Kassan, director of Vividathà Research Group in the School and Applied Child Psychology program at the University of British Columbia, and Moodley, director of the Center for Diversity in Counseling and Psychotherapy at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at the University of Toronto, bring a wealth of experience, both personal and professional. Their goal, it seems, was to bring both a discussion that centers on race through an anti-racism lens while inviting the complicating aspects of intersectionality. Each author in the edited book provides a practical case study that applies the information from the chapter to a real case from their professional practice. This section brings the challenges alive and highlights the nuances of the complex presentation of the many multis of our multifaceted identities; culture, ethnicity, race, gender, sex, class, ability, faith, age, to name a few. Each chapter ends with a section that explores implications for practice, training, research, and policy. The book, divided into five sections, draws authors from across North America and beyond with varied professional and personal positionalities. Part I deconstructs the Western scientific worldview that privileges it over other ways of knowing by exploring Indigenous knowledge, critical race theory, and a critical review of multicultural and social justice (SJ) competencies. The final chapter in this section offers a “third space of counseling” (p. 54), where clinicians are called to put SJ and diversity into action by seeking to address causes of oppression moving beyond simply trying to reduce individual suffering. Part II and III more specifically speak to understanding how well-known theories of psychology are conceptualized through an SJ lens and from the perspective of contemporary diverse lenses. Thankfully, the authors do not shy away from providing practical suggestions for clinical practice. Although hard to choose the most impactful chapter, Cheshire and Noldy-MacLean’s chapter on Slow Intersectionality offers up pragmatic guidance on how to avoid a reductionist approach and bring a multifaceted perspective of identity into clinical work. Part IV introduces the Group of Seven Identities, race/culture/ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, disability/spirituality, and age while providing space for weight bias and ethical nonmonogamy. And finally, Part V steps outside the borders of Canada and the United States to address the internationalization of counseling, psychology, and psychotherapy. This section pushes anticolonial thinking by considering systemic disparities utilizing lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic, the newcomer experience of youth seeking education in North America, a human rights perspective of ethical practice, and finally a look at lessons from global psychologies and ways of healing. The edited book is comprehensive, inclusive, and user friendly. The how is often missed when SJ and diversity are the topics—it is often all too easy, and safe, to stick to theory. Kassan, Moodley, and their authors provide a welcome balance of theory and actionable guidance. Despite pushing the bounds of traditional counseling, psychology, and psychotherapy, the material presented in the text remains mostly on helping individuals heal in ways that align with most helping professions. Clinicians would benefit from a more explicit bridge between western and traditional practices. Perhaps Kassan and Moodley are considering a Volume 2? They do, however, push the reader to embrace controversy and to become more comfortable with the discomfort this may bring. Indeed, with a forward offered by Courtland Lee that suggests Kassan and Moodley pushed the envelope, who can argue this book should not be on the bookshelf of those purporting to integrate social justice into their teaching, practice, and indeed, being.
书评:秘密的秘密生活:我们的内心世界如何塑造幸福、关系和我们是谁
Kassan和Moodley在咨询、心理学和心理治疗实践方面处于有利地位,这些实践源于欧洲白人的心理传统。不列颠哥伦比亚大学学校和应用儿童心理学项目Vividathà研究小组主任Kassan和多伦多大学安大略教育研究所咨询和心理治疗多样性中心主任Moodley带来了丰富的个人和专业经验。他们的目标似乎是通过反种族主义的视角进行以种族为中心的讨论,同时邀请交叉性的复杂方面。编辑后的书中的每一位作者都提供了一个实际的案例研究,将本章中的信息应用到他们专业实践中的真实案例中。本节生动地展现了挑战,并强调了我们多方面身份的复杂呈现的细微差别;文化、种族、种族、性别、阶级、能力、信仰、年龄等等。每章最后都有一节探讨实践、培训、研究和政策的含义。这本书分为五个部分,吸引了来自北美及其他地区的不同专业和个人立场的作者。第一部分通过探索本土知识、批判性种族理论和对多元文化和社会正义(SJ)能力的批判性审查,解构了西方科学世界观,这种世界观使其凌驾于其他认知方式之上。本节的最后一章提供了“第三个咨询空间”(第54页),临床医生被要求将SJ和多样性付诸行动,寻求解决压迫的原因,而不仅仅是试图减少个人痛苦。第二部分和第三部分更具体地阐述了如何通过SJ视角和当代不同视角来理解众所周知的心理学理论。值得庆幸的是,作者并不回避为临床实践提供实用建议。尽管很难选择最具影响力的章节,但Cheshire和Noldy MacLean关于慢交叉性的章节为如何避免简化主义方法并将身份的多方面视角带入临床工作提供了务实的指导。第四部分介绍了七国集团的身份、种族/文化/民族、性别、性取向、残疾/精神和年龄,同时为体重偏见和道德上的非一夫多妻制提供了空间。最后,第五部分走出加拿大和美国的边界,解决咨询、心理学和心理治疗的国际化问题。本节通过利用新冠肺炎大流行的经验教训、北美年轻人寻求教育的新经历、道德实践的人权视角,以及全球心理学和治愈方法的经验教训,推动反殖民思维。这本经过编辑的书全面、包容、用户友好。当SJ和多样性成为主题时,人们往往会忽略如何——坚持理论往往太容易了,也太安全了。Kassan、Moodley和他们的作者在理论和可操作的指导之间提供了一种受欢迎的平衡。尽管突破了传统咨询、心理学和心理治疗的界限,但文本中提供的材料仍然主要是以与大多数帮助职业一致的方式帮助个人康复。临床医生将受益于西方和传统做法之间更明确的桥梁。也许Kassan和Moodley正在考虑第二卷?然而,它们确实促使读者接受争议,并对这可能带来的不适感到更加舒适。事实上,随着Courtland Lee提出的一个建议,Kassan和Moodley突破了极限,谁能说这本书不应该出现在那些声称将社会正义融入他们的教学、实践甚至存在的人的书架上。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
5.00%
发文量
50
期刊介绍: Psychology of Women Quarterly (PWQ) is a feminist, scientific, peer-reviewed journal that publishes empirical research, critical reviews and theoretical articles that advance a field of inquiry, teaching briefs, and invited book reviews related to the psychology of women and gender. Topics include (but are not limited to) feminist approaches, methodologies, and critiques; violence against women; body image and objectification; sexism, stereotyping, and discrimination; intersectionality of gender with other social locations (such as age, ability status, class, ethnicity, race, and sexual orientation); international concerns; lifespan development and change; physical and mental well being; therapeutic interventions; sexuality; social activism; and career development. This journal will be of interest to clinicians, faculty, and researchers in all psychology disciplines, as well as those interested in the sociology of gender, women’s studies, interpersonal violence, ethnic and multicultural studies, social advocates, policy makers, and teacher education.
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