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September, 2005 | SAGE Publications, Inc

Culture, Psychotherapy, and Counseling

Critical and Integrative Perspectives

First Edition
Lisa Tsoi Hoshmand
- Lesley University, USA
288 pages | September, 2005 | SAGE Publications, Inc
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ISBN: 9781452245058
Hardcover
ISBN: 9780761930518
$160.00
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ISBN: 9780761930525
$115.00
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eBook
ISBN: 9781452245058

Culture, Psychotherapy, and Counseling: Critical and Integrative Perspectives takes a comprehensive approach to culture as it relates to psychological practice. By viewing psychotherapy and counseling as science-based cultural enterprises, this book expands the understanding of culture in terms of the politics of identity, symbolic and practice meanings, moral ontology, and global realities. Editor Lisa Tsoi Hoshmand brings together a diverse group of authors to present different accounts and case examples of their work as practitioners to illustrate the integration of the personal with the professional. A variety of theoretical and clinical issues are discussed, including psychological trauma, depression, chronic illness, and other problems presented by clients for whom a culturally informed practice is essential.   

Key Features:

  • Offers a comprehensive framework for the integration of psychotherapy and counseling as a science-based cultural enterprise
  • Examines the social and moral implications of psychotherapy and counseling by applying feminist, hermeneutic, and relational perspectives
  • Includes case studies to demonstrate the culturally constructed nature of practice
  • Exposes readers to non-Western and holistic perspectives, such as Buddhist and Hawaiian psychology, to provide a global context of culture and identity in the contemporary world 
  • Provides a reflective, developmental approach to evaluating oneself and one’s work within the traditions of Western psychological theory and practice

Culture, Psychotherapy, and Counseling is an excellent textbook for advanced undergraduate and graduate courses on counseling and psychotherapy focusing on culture in the fields of Counseling and Clinical Psychology, Social Work, and Psychiatry. It is also a valuable resource for psychotherapists, counseling practitioners, clinical social workers, psychiatrists, and other human service professionals.  Throughout the book, the authors critically examine the social and moral implications of psychotherapy and counseling, including applying feminist and hermeneutic perspectives to the therapeutic enterprise.  Suggestions are made for a culturally based integration of the field, followed by recommendations for training.

Preface
Acknowledgments
PART I: INTRODUCTION
1. Thinking Through Culture
2. Culture and the Field of Psychotherapy and Counseling
PART II: THERAPIST ACCOUNTS: REFLECTION, CRITIQUE, AND INTEGRATION
3. Psychotherapy and Counselling as Cultural Work
4. The Felt Sense as Avenue of Human Experiencing for Integrative Growth
5. Integrating the World’s Psychologies
6. Hawaiian Psychology
7. Toward a Feminist Ecological Awareness
8. A Woman’s View of Clinical Trauma Theory and Therapy
9. Hermeneutics and the Moral Dimension of Psychotherapy
10. Cultural Conflict, Values, and Relational Learning in Psychotherapy
PART III: CONCLUSION
11. Summary and Conclusion
About the Editor
About the Authors
Author Index
Subject Index
  • A cogent argument for the integration of psychotherapeutic theory and practice.
  • Case studies to demonstrate the culturally constructed nature of practice.
  • Student/reader support (in Chapter 9) for the development of a critical personal framework to assess oneself and one's work within the inherited traditions of western theory and practice.
  • Provides a comprehensive review of the literature on culture, psychotherapy and counseling, with a discussion of psychotherapy integration and evidence-based practice.