Creating and Elaborating the Cultural Third: A Doers-Doing with Perspective on Psychoanalytic Supervision
Although recognized as highly crucial to supervision practice (e.g., Tummala-Narra, 2004 ), culture has been addressed minimally in the psychoanalytic supervision literature. Calls to remedy that limitation have been made and making culture matter has been identified as a most pressing need for psyc...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The American journal of psychoanalysis 2019-09, Vol.79 (3), p.352-374 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Although recognized as highly crucial to supervision practice (e.g., Tummala-Narra,
2004
), culture has been addressed minimally in the psychoanalytic supervision literature. Calls to remedy that limitation have been made and making culture matter has been identified as a most pressing need for psychoanalytic supervision. But how then do we as supervisors go about doing that? How might we better position culture in, and make culture central to, our psychoanalytic supervisory conceptualization and conduct? We subsequently take up those questions, expanding upon our earlier proposals about cultural humility and the
Cultural Third
(Watkins and Hook,
2016
) by (a) proposing a tripartite multicultural perspective (i.e., cultural humility-cultural comfort-cultural opportunities) as supervision sine qua non; (b) using recognition theory as a way to better understand that very process of
Third
creation and elaboration; and (c) providing a rupture/repair case example that shows efforts to create and build the
Cultural Third
in supervision. The
Cultural Third
is conceptualized as a product of
doers
-
doing with
so as to culturally learn together through “not knowing”. |
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ISSN: | 0002-9548 1573-6741 |
DOI: | 10.1057/s11231-019-09203-4 |