探索动态无意识:纵向感染hiv阳性青少年的主体间性与种族自我

Ruby Patel, Tanya Graham
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引用次数: 0

摘要

心理临床实践及专业培训督导临床评估。她的研究兴趣包括社会不对称、行动主义和倡导、社会政治问题的应用精神分析理论、艾滋病毒阳性儿童和年轻人的发展挑战。她目前正在完成精神分析心理治疗项目的博士学位。Tanya Graham,咨询心理学家,威特沃特斯兰德大学人类与社区学院心理学系副教授。她主要参与对社区和治疗实践中的心理学家进行专业培训,并讲授职业道德、人权和研究方法。她的研究兴趣包括社区心理学、批判心理学和公共卫生理论,以及边缘化社区的社会心理支持和倡导需求。她在社区心理学理论、实践、培训和知识生产等领域发表过文章;以及影响后种族隔离时期南非儿童和青年的社会心理和发展问题。她目前正在指导精神分析心理治疗项目的几名博士生。摘要本文探讨了从出生起作为社会政治插入场所的心灵内生活。本文的第一部分涉及Melanie Klein的精神分析理论,即动态无意识和俄狄浦斯情境是自我发展的关键过程。论文接着讨论了学者们所采取的批判当代立场,他们强调了俄狄浦斯情结的种族化及其在为种族等级辩护方面的应用。此外,本文将无意识作为一种主体间组织原则。弗兰兹·法农处理殖民主体性的精神分析框架在这里被回顾,以探索种族自我是如何被强加和内化的。论文的第二部分将这一理论论点置于艾滋病毒的背景下。内在的心理发展,从出生起就存在于我们的潜意识中,不能脱离特定的社会政治考虑来理解。艾滋病毒对纵向感染的青少年的独特发育挑战不能被认为是理所当然的,必须更多地考虑如何利用主体间性的、具有政治意识的精神分析方法,为南非纵向感染艾滋病毒阳性青少年的临床知识和实践提供信息。因此,年轻人被强烈地社会化,接受了白人和中产阶级的规范,认为这是可取的,在接受他们的多重身份方面没有得到积极的支持。值得注意的是,这些机制对管理者来说是不可见的。P1说:“我们不认为孩子们感染了艾滋病毒……我们确实把他们看成黑白分明……讽刺的是,当你问孩子们他们想成为哪种文化时,他们会说是白人。”因此,种族和阶级问题对寄宿照料的经历、艾滋病毒状况和青春期都有影响,但没有被正式承认为影响因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Exploring the Dynamic Unconscious: Intersubjectivity and the Raced-Self in Vertically Infected HIV-Positive Adolescents
psychological clinical practice and the professional training and supervision of clinical assessment. Her research interest lies in social asymmetries, activism and advocacy, applied psychoanalytic theorising of socio-political issues, developmental challenges in children and young adults who are HIV-positive. She is currently completing her PhD in the Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy programme. Tanya Graham counselling psychologist and an Associate Professor in the Department of Psychology, School of Human and Community at the University of the Witwatersrand. She is primarily involved in the professional training of psychologists in community and therapeutic practice, and also lec-tures in professional ethics, human rights and research methods. Her research interests lie in the fields of community psychology, critical psychology and public health theory, as well as the psychosocial support and advocacy needs of marginalised communities. She has published in the areas of community psychology theory, practice, training and knowledge production; as well as the psychosocial and developmental issues affecting children and youth in post-apartheid South Africa. She is currently supervising several doctoral students in the PhD in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy programme. ABSTRACT This paper explores intrapsychic life as a site of socio-political insertion from birth. The first part of this paper engages with the psychoanalytic theory of Melanie Klein on the notion of the dynamic unconscious and the Oedipal situation as key processes in the development of the self. The paper goes on to discuss the critical contemporary position taken up by scholars who have highlighted the racialisation of the Oedipus complex and its use in justifying racial hierarchies. Furthermore, the paper engages with the unconscious as an intersubjective organising principle. Franz Fanon’s psychoanalytic framework, that deals with colonial subjectivity, is reviewed here in order to explore how the raced-self becomes imposed and internalised. The second part of the paper locates this theoretical argument within the context of HIV. Intrapsychic development, which comes to be located in our unconscious mind from birth, cannot be understood outside of specific socio-political considerations. The unique developmental challenges of HIV for those who are vertically infected cannot be taken for granted, and there must be more deliberation on the ways in which intersubjective, politically aware versions of psychoanalysis can be used to inform clinical knowledge and practice in working with vertically infected HIV-positive adolescents in South Africa. The youth had thus been strongly socialised into accepting white, middle class norms as desirable, and were not actively supported in coming to terms with their multiple identities. Notably, these mechanisms were invisible to the managers. P1 posited: “We don’t see the kids as with HIV . . . We do see them as Black and White . . . Ironically when you ask the children which culture they want to be, it is White”. Race and class issues thus had an impact on the experiences of residential care, HIV status and adoles-cence, but were not formally acknowledged as influencing factors.
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