在愤怒的政治中工作:用辩证的方法去殖民化心理学

Pub Date : 2023-02-22 DOI:10.1177/09713336231152302
Umesh L. Bharte, A. Mishra
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引用次数: 0

摘要

我们在这里特别关注的是如何解释(或误解)去殖民化心理学,以及它对使我们的学科成为真正解放事业的影响。我们在此提出三个相关的论点:第一,殖民主义是殖民者和被殖民者之间的一项共同工程,而不是殖民者单方面强加世界观。其次,被殖民社会(在其被殖民之前)的价值观的集合促进了殖民主义的成果,即使在这些社会从殖民统治中解放出来之后,它们仍然是这些社会文化的一部分。第三,土著心理学的一个版本是基于简单的二元对立,如土著vs西方,本地vs全球,或自我vs他者,注定无法实现实质性的非殖民化目标。此外,正如爱德华·萨义德(Edward Said)在其经典著作《东方主义》(Orientalism, 1978)中所说的那样,也存在着一种本土政治,东方的概念本身就是出于意识形态目的而对西方的建构。因此,最终认为,真正的或实质性的非殖民化项目只能通过对自我和文化的适当理解来完成,而这一目标可以通过与他人合作来实现。此外,一个社会的文化可以被看作是一系列不同的、经常是相互矛盾的价值观,这些价值观通过提供对某些文化倾向的内部批评来帮助检查它的过度。这种看待文化的方式要求将其视为一个动态的过程,并且需要用辩证的方法来检查文化中相互矛盾的价值观之间关系的本质。在这一努力中,批判性文化精神分析的方法论帮助我们认识到殖民者和被殖民者社会文化中有意识和无意识/被压抑方面之间的辩证关系,并通过他们通过恢复/拥有他们自我的被压抑/被否认的方面来扩大他们的意识。最后,有人认为,像殖民化一样,实质性的非殖民化也将涉及殖民者和被殖民者之间的合作过程,他们可以完全认识和拥有自己的自我。
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Working Through the Politics of Indigeneity: Decolonising Psychology by Way of a Dialectical Approach
Our particular concern here is with how decolonising psychology is interpreted (or misinterpreted) as well as its implications for making our discipline a truly liberating enterprise. We make three related arguments here: first, colonialism was a joint project between the colonisers and the colonised instead of being a one-way imposition of the worldviews of just the colonisers. Second, the constellation of the values of the colonised societies (before their colonisation) that facilitated the fruition of colonialism continues to be a part of the culture of these societies even after their freedom from colonial rule. Third, a version of indigenous psychology that is based on simplistic binaries such as Indigenous vs Western, Local vs Global, or Self vs Other is bound to fail in achieving the goal of substantive decolonisation. Moreover, there is a politics of indigeneity too as Edward Said in his classic Orientalism (1978) has argued that the concept of the orient itself was a construction of the West for an ideological purpose. Therefore, it is ultimately argued that the project of true or substantive decolonisation can be accomplished only by attaining a proper understanding of self and culture and this goal can be achieved by collaborating with others. Further, the culture of a society may be viewed as a set of disparate, often contradictory values which help to keep a check on the excesses of certain cultural tendencies by offering an internal critique of it. This way of looking at culture calls for viewing it as a dynamic process and necessitates a dialectical approach to examine the nature of the relationship between contradictory values of a culture. In this effort, the methodology of critical cultural psychoanalysis helps us to recognise the dialectical relation between the conscious and the unconscious/repressed aspect of the culture of the societies of the coloniser and the colonised and work through them to expand their consciousness by recovering/owning the repressed/disavowed aspect of their self. Finally, it is argued that like colonisation, substantive decolonisation will also involve a collaborative process between the colonisers and the colonised whereby they can recognise and own their selves in entirety.
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