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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20240309T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20240309T170000
DTSTAMP:20260509T044623
CREATED:20240125T163841Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251110T110706Z
UID:10000023-1709996400-1710003600@guildofpsychotherapists.org.uk
SUMMARY:The Enemy Within the White Mind: Analyzing the Role of Misandric Caricatures in Psychological Assessments of Black Males
DESCRIPTION:This is the latest in a series of seminars on Decolonising Psychoanalysis\, organised by the Race and Culture Committee of the Guild of Psychotherapists. The series is intended to open up conversations about psychoanalysis by initiating Psycho-Philosophical Dialogues between academic philosophers and psychotherapists\, bringing clinical responses to their academic decolonial work. \nDecolonising Psychoanalysis Seminars\nThe Enemy Within the white Mind: Psychological Assessments of Black Males. \n \nProf. Tommy Curry and Charles Brown \nSaturday 9th March 2024\, 3:00pm – 5:00pm BST\nOnline seminar £12 – £24 \nEfforts to decolonize various disciplines and institutions have led to an interrogation of white clinical and institutional engagements with Black communities in the United Kingdom. However\, many of these attempts to decolonize have only reified white liberal perspectives of diversity and inclusion without a serious interrogation of the racist paradigms\, white supremacist history\, and anti-Black sentiments involved in cross-racial diagnoses of Black males within long-established disciplines and practices. Pathologizing Black men and boys as deviants through dissidence has a long history in the U.S. and U.K. Drawing from the extensive literature in Black psychology and emerging fields such as Black Male Studies\, this presentation will show how societal racism and norms dictate psychological theories of Black deviance and maladjustment as well as outcomes in the diagnoses and institutionalization of Black males as a mechanism of social control. \nTommy Curry is a professor\, activist and public intellectual based in the School of Philosophy at The University of Edinburgh\, where he is Personal Chair of Africana Philosophy & Black Male Studies. He is the author of The Man-Not: Race\, Class\, Genre\, and the Dilemmas of Black Manhood (Temple University Press 2017)\, which won the 2018 American Book Award. He is also the editor of the first book series dedicated to the study of Black males\, entitled Black Male Studies: A Series Exploring the Paradoxes of Racially Subjugated Males(Temple University Press). His book Another white Man’s Burden: Josiah Royce’s Quest for a Philosophy of white Racial Empire (2018) won the Josiah Royce Award in American Idealist Thought (2020). In 2016 he re-published the forgotten philosophical works of William Ferris as The Philosophical Treatise of William H. Ferris: Selected Readings from The African Abroad or\, His Evolution in Western Civilization. Much of Curry’s writing is based on combining social science research with philosophy and theory. He claims that many of the theories offered to explain the lives of Black Americans are not only incorrect but rely on outdated racist modes of thinking. As a scholar of Critical Race Theory\, Curry’s work focuses on the theories developed by racial realists like Derrick Bell\, Richard Delgado\, Jean Stefancic\, and Kenneth Nunn. He argues that idealist strands of critical race theory are unable to account for the brutal realities of Black death and dying\, poverty\, and de facto segregation. \nCharles Brown is a member of The Guild of Psychotherapists\, a UKCP Fellow\, Honorary Associate member of AGIP (Association of Individual and Group Psychotherapists) and a practicing psychoanalytic psychotherapist and supervisor. He is a training psychotherapist and supervisor at The Bowlby Centre\, a psychodynamic counsellor and an addiction therapist. He is a visiting lecturer at The University of East London\, where he lectures on the MA Social Work course. He teaches on several psychoanalytic trainings and has a particular interest in identity. \nHe is the Chair of the CPJA (Council for Psychoanalysis and Jungian Analysis) Race and Culture Committee and Chair of BAPPS (British Association for Psychodynamic and Psychoanalytic Supervisors). He has published articles and book chapters. \nBursary tickets\nA limited number of bursary tickets are available on a pay-what-you-can basis to anyone who would not be able to attend the event without financial assistance. To apply for a bursary ticket please email ivan_talks@guildofpsychotherapists.org.uk. Thank you. \nA recording will be available for ticket buyers for a month after the event. \nCPD certificates available on request. \nOrganised by the Race and Culture Committee of the Guild of Psychotherapists. \nThe Race and Culture Committee (RCC) was set up to provide a forum for Black\, Asian and Minority Ethnic members of The Guild of Psychotherapists to discuss issues of common concern\, address ‘racial’ and cultural questions from a psychoanalytic and analytical psychology perspective\, and promote anti-racist practice and racial equity within psychotherapy and the wider community. It embodies the values and purposes of The Guild in establishing ‘a pluralistic professional body to foster independence of thought\, a spirit of inquiry\, and freedom to develop creatively for the benefit of the profession and the public seeking psychological help.’
URL:https://guildofpsychotherapists.org.uk/event/the-enemy-within-the-white-mind-analyzing-the-role-of-misandric-caricatures-in-psychological-assessments-of-black-males/
CATEGORIES:Events
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20240622T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20240622T160000
DTSTAMP:20260509T044623
CREATED:20240513T153222Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251110T110706Z
UID:10000022-1719064800-1719072000@guildofpsychotherapists.org.uk
SUMMARY:Outrageous Reason: Madness and Race in Britain and Empire\, 1780-2020
DESCRIPTION:OUTRAGEOUS REASON: MADNESS AND RACE IN BRITAIN AND EMPIRE\, 1780–2020    \nPeter Barham with a foreword by Dwight Turner \nBook Reading with Peter Barham followed by a discussion between Peter Barham and Marion Gow \nSaturday 22nd June 2024\, 2:00-4.00pm BST \nOnline via zoom \nThis powerful and disturbing book draws direct comparisons between the plight and fates of African slaves\, dehumanised and discarded to sanitise Britain’s trade in human lives and imperial ambitions\, and the systemic ‘othering’ of people designated ‘mad’ throughout Western history. Drawing on contemporary historical records\, Peter Barham recounts\, often in their own words\, the stories of black people incarcerated in the lunatic asylum at Kingston Jamaica\, poor white women similarly ejected into the British psychiatric system in the early 20th century for failing to live up to class and gender norms\, and most shockingly\, black men who have died at the hands of the police and mental health nurses in state custody and psychiatric detention. Endemic racism\, greed\, cruelty\, exploitation and social control are writ large across this account that demands to be read by all those concerned for human rights\, mad rights\, Black lives and truth-telling about Britain’s shameful colonial past and racist present. \nPeter Barham has been working\, writing and engaging critically in the mental health field for more than 50 years. His work straddles clinical research\, psychoanalysis\, practical initiative\, historical inquiry\, mental health activism and film making. He has a PhD in abnormal psychology from the University of Durham and in modern history from the University of Cambridge. He is a chartered psychologist and was elected a fellow of the British Psychological Society for his ‘outstanding contribution to psychological approaches to the understanding of psychosis’. He is the founder of the Hamlet Trust\, which pioneered grassroots mental health reform in Central and Eastern Europe\, supported by George Soros’ Open Society Institute. His books include  Schizophrenia and Human Value (1995)\, first published in 1984\, Forgotten Lunatics of the Great War (2004\, 2007) and Closing the Asylum: The mental patient in modern society\, first published in 1992 and reissued in 2020. \nMarion Gow Psychoanalytic psychotherapist. Member of the Guild of Psychotherapists and UKCP\nShe has worked both privately and in the voluntary sector including Women’s Aid\, Family Welfare Association\, The Women’s Therapy Centre\, The Guild Clinic as Chair\, The Guild training committee. She is a pluralist by persuasion with special interest in Laplanche and all contemporary theories that can assist in interrogating all forms of psychological difficulties including Race Class Gender and Sexuality and all matters critical to understanding oneself and others .\nAs a psychotherapist\, feminist and now older woman she has a critical interest in the social\, political\, racial and gendered dimensions of the human condition and how they too enigmatically present themselves. \nDonations for The Guild of Psychotherapists reduced fee clinic would be welcome \nA recording will be available for ticket buyers for a month after the event. \nCPD certificates available on request. \nFor your copy of Outrageous Reason £21.50 p&p inc bit.ly/outrageousreason \nImage credit ‘All Hands on Decks’ (2003) by Denzil Forrester \nOrganised by the Race and Culture Committee of the Guild of Psychotherapists.The Race and Culture Committee (RCC) was set up to provide a forum for Black\, Asian and Minority Ethnic members of The Guild of Psychotherapists to discuss issues of common concern\, address ‘racial’ and cultural ques \ntions from a psychoanalytic and analytical psychology perspective\, and promote anti-racist practice and racial equity within psychotherapy and the wider community. It embodies the values and purposes of The Guild in establishing ‘a pluralistic professional body to foster independence of thought\, a spirit of inquiry\, and freedom to develop creatively for the benefit of the profession and the public seeking psychological help.’ \n 
URL:https://guildofpsychotherapists.org.uk/event/outrageous-reason-madness-and-race-in-britain-and-empire-1780-2020/
CATEGORIES:Events
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20240706T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20240706T170000
DTSTAMP:20260509T044623
CREATED:20240524T153003Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251110T110706Z
UID:10000021-1720278000-1720285200@guildofpsychotherapists.org.uk
SUMMARY:Decolonising Psychotherapy as an Ethic of Disillusionment
DESCRIPTION:Decolonising Psychotherapy as an Ethic of Disillusionment\nThis is the latest in a series of seminars on Decolonising Psychoanalysis\, organised by the Race and Culture Committee of the Guild of Psychotherapists. The series is intended to open up conversations about psychoanalysis and psychotherapy by initiating Psycho-Philosophical Dialogues between academic philosophers and psychotherapists\, bringing clinical responses to the academic decolonial work. \nA recording of the seminar will be available to ticket-holders for a month after the event. \nDecolonising Psychotherapy as an Ethic of Disillusionment\nNini Kerr\nwith Dr. Tarun Pamneja (respondent) \nSaturday 6 July 2024\n3:00pm – 5:00pm BST \nOnline seminar £12 – £24 \nAbstract – Dr. Nini Kerr\n“Susie looks unsettled as she enters the room. Planting herself down in the chair\, she holds onto the armrests as if preparing for a thunderstorm in the therapeutic terrain. Her subdued smile and offhand comments about the weather do little to disguise her agitation…”\nThis presentation explores what it means to contest the Eurocentric system of therapeutic practice\, and the demands it places on non-white practitioners. It delves into the challenges of decolonising psychotherapy in action\, addressing crucial questions not at all easy to answer\, surrounding what it means\, what it takes\, and\, most importantly\, how we are set back in navigating a decolonial approach to therapeutic care. Rather than assuming a linear progression towards a more equitable therapeutic future\, it focuses instead on psychoanalysis’ ancient preoccupation with whiteness\, which bears upon the practice. I invite the audience into my consulting room to witness the often palpable yet unspoken tension surrounding ‘race’. I stage a series of therapeutic encounters between myself (as the practitioner) and Susie (the client\, pseudonym) as two women of colour\, showing how the intersectional workings of oppression from ‘outside’ can be reproduced in the consulting room. I offer my reflections on these ‘failings’ and connect them with Layton’s (2019) concept of the ‘ethic of disillusionment’. Through this\, I highlight the tension between conceptual relations and social relations: how our ‘devotion’ to a theory recreates within the therapeutic relationships the pervasive differential relations in psychoanalytic syntax. \n \nSpeakers’ Biographies\nNini Kerr has engaged in extensive research critically exploring the lived experiences of marginalised communities. Her research delves into the intricate and nuanced connections between identity\, psychological experiences\, and social reality\, providing actionable insights into the impact of various forms of inequality. She is a Lecturer in Counselling\, Psychotherapy\, and Applied Social Sciences at the University of Edinburgh\, and an accredited trainer and practitioner. She has published extensively in the field of psychosocial studies and recently won the Good Practice Research Award in the Positive Disruptor category in 2022\, in recognition of her sustained achievements in innovating and revitalising research practices that promote social justice and equality. She has been awarded the Principal’s Teaching Award Scheme for her project on decolonising counselling and psychotherapy (2023-2024). She is a Scholar of the British Psychoanalytic Council and serves on the Executive Board for the Association for Psychosocial Studies and the Editorial Board for Psychoanalysis\, Culture & Society. \nTarun Pamneja is a Doctor of Integrative Psychotherapy and Counselling Psychology and now works in private practice as a psychotherapist and supervisor. He has three decades of professional experience in the mental health arena\, with extensive experience of working in the NHS and charities supporting people diagnosed with severe mental illness and emotional distress. For his doctoral research\, he investigated Conflict Within Psychosis Treatment in the English NHS: Investigating the Experiences of Patients and Psychiatrists. His main interests are the intersections of race\, gender\, sexuality\, disability and morality. \nBursary tickets A limited number of bursary tickets are available on a pay-what-you-can basis to anyone who would not be able to attend the event without financial assistance. To apply for a bursary ticket please email ivan_talks@guildofpsychotherapists.org.uk. Thank you. \nCPD certificates available on request. \nOrganised by the Race and Culture Committee of the Guild of Psychotherapists. \nCaption: Image above from the Jardim Miriam Arte Club (JAMAC)\, a therapeutic group in São Paulo\, Brazil. Photo: Ana Minozzo
URL:https://guildofpsychotherapists.org.uk/event/decolonising-psychotherapy-as-an-ethic-of-disillusionment/
CATEGORIES:Events
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