Jeong and Han: The Clinical Implications of Postcolonial Theology on Suffering and Oppression

Pub Date : 2022-02-15 DOI:10.1177/00916471211071054
Jenny H. Pak
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Abstract

The new wave of Asian/Asian American postcolonial, feminist scholarship provides a route to engage in critical dialogue, raising awareness that essentialist notions of race, class, ethnicity, gender, and religion fail to account for the complex and dynamic social reality individuals with bicultural/hybrid identity face. Because American psychology in general and integration of theology and psychology in particular has traditionally taken a detached stance toward the culture of the “other,” for this article Joh’s (2006) seminal work, Heart of the Cross: A Postcolonial Christology, was selected to amplify a much-needed perspective and cultural sensibility. Grounded in feminist theology, the Korean concept of jeong, a complex, multidimensional meaning of relationality, is used to dismantle the divide between self and other, love and hate, oppressed and oppressor; in this way, the traditional atonement theory and the cross is reconceptualized so that Christ fully embodies radical, inclusive love that offers a new vision of wholeness and life for those suffering from individual and collective oppression. As theology holds potential for the integration necessary in therapy for healing and restoration, this article offers a resource for clinicians interested in expanding the language and horizon of integration—not just with Korean clients, but more broadly beyond white, normative borders.
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郑和韩:后殖民神学对苦难和压迫的临床意义
亚裔/亚裔美国人后殖民主义女权主义学术的新浪潮提供了一条参与批判性对话的途径,提高了人们的意识,即种族、阶级、族裔、性别和宗教的本质主义观念无法解释具有双文化/混合身份的个人所面临的复杂而动态的社会现实。由于美国心理学,尤其是神学和心理学的融合,传统上对“他者”的文化采取了超然的立场,因此本文选择了Joh(2006)的开创性作品《十字架之心:后殖民基督论》,以放大急需的视角和文化敏感性。基于女权主义神学,韩国的jeong概念,一种复杂的、多维的关系意义,被用来消除自我与他人、爱与恨、被压迫者与压迫者之间的鸿沟;通过这种方式,传统的赎罪理论和十字架被重新定义,使基督充分体现了激进、包容的爱,为那些遭受个人和集体压迫的人提供了一个完整和生命的新愿景。由于神学在治疗治愈和恢复中具有必要的整合潜力,本文为有兴趣扩展整合语言和视野的临床医生提供了一个资源——不仅是与韩国客户,而且更广泛地超越白人的规范边界。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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