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Therapy Across Culture (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,465
Discovery Miles 14 650
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Therapy Across Culture (Paperback)
Series: Perspectives on Psychotherapy series
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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`This is an important book which has a broader relevance to
psychotherapists than its title suggests. In an academically
rigorous style... and drawing on her own experience as an
anthropologist and systemic (family) therapist, Inga-Britt Krause
shows how ethnographic methodology (fieldwork) and its research
findings can be drawn on to radically deepen our clinical insight
into "difference"... Krause is both challenging and refreshing in
her approach. She goes beyond asserting the need for insights to be
gleaned from anthropology in cross-cultural clinical work to
suggest that psychoanalysis itself could also benefit... Thinking
about her book has focused my interest in the cultural dimensions
of clinical work, and in the role of kinship, taboo and ritual, in
the inter and intraprofessional conflicts which permeate our
profession' - British Journal of Psychotherapy This groundbreaking
book demonstrates the importance of cross-cultural communication to
psychotherapy, psychoanalysis and counselling. It gives an
introduction to anthropological issues which are relevant to
cross-cultural work, examining practical as well as conceptual
aspects of culture. The book provides an overview and gives
examples on which clinicians may draw to enhance their
understanding of their clients, and which will help anthropologists
to understand and interpret the personal circumstances of their
informants. Complex theories from ethnography and anthropology are
explained and made accessible, while kinship, attachment and
emotion, ritual and taboo are explored, illuminating how the
cultural content of patterns of interaction and behaviour are
expressed in ideas, feelings, attitudes and inclinations. Finally,
it is argued that cross-cultural communication must originate in
the therapist or anthropologist taking responsibility for becoming
aware of his or her own assumptions as a starting point for
cross-cultural work.
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