Beyond Islamization: Re-envisioning Western Psychotherapy within an Indigenous Psychological Paradigm

Author(s):  
Abdallah Rothman
Author(s):  
Ruthellen Josselson

This chapter reviews the history of psychotherapy in China and the gradual opening to Western ideas about psychotherapy. It details the difficulty of getting a Western mind around what Chinese therapists thought was psychotherapy and the ways in which their understandings only became accessible through working together. Translating the concepts into action, not just language, revealed the points of cultural collision. A workshop and a process group illuminated our shared humanity. A decision about how the recording of the process group was to be used, however, unearthed differing fundamental assumptions about privacy and piracy.


1963 ◽  
Vol 119 (7) ◽  
pp. 698-b-699
Author(s):  
HENRY P. LAUGHLIN

1993 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 127-132 ◽  
Author(s):  
Louis Yang-Ching Cheng

The experience of psychotherapy supervision of a group of trainee psychiatrists, in a university setting in Hong Kong, is reported from the supervisor's perspective. The trainees showed difficulties in this exercise. The cultural difference between the supervisor and the trainees, and that between the Western psychotherapy culture and the Chinese culture, is discussed. It is then followed by a description of what is seen as the trainees' resistance in the acceptance of psychotherapy and of the supervisor. This is considered to be one of the problems in the transcultural application of psychotherapy, and has to be overcome if this importation is to be successful.


Author(s):  
Gayathri S. Kumar ◽  
Gwen Soffer ◽  
Danielle Begg

ABSTRACT Persons who are refugees may experience mental health concerns, such as posttraumatic stress disorder and depression, due to multiple layers of trauma experienced before, during, and after fleeing their country of origin. Although several health system– and community-based mental health interventions have been found to be effective in improving mental health outcomes among persons who are refugees in the United States, these services are underutilized among refugees. Movement-based and mind body–focused practices, such as yoga, may play an important role as complementary mental health supports for refugees. Data on the effectiveness of these practices in these populations are limited, and further research is needed. However, these practices can still be introduced in a safe way by trained professionals and offered as adjunctive therapeutic approaches to traditional Western psychotherapy options. We offer recommendations for clinical providers working with persons who are refugees and for movement-based facilitators and therapists on how to introduce these practices to resettled refugee populations in the United States.


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