Immigration in Psychoanalysis

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acculturation stress
Ambiguous Belonging
analyst
Category=JMAF
Clinical Case Vignette
consciousness
cross-cultural psychology
Demarcation
Demarcation Line
Dino Koutsolioutsos
Dori Laub
double
Double Consciousness
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Eva Hoffman
Exilic Position
existential psychotherapy
Fortunoff Video Archive
Francisco J. Gonzz
Ghislaine Boulanger
Glenys Lobban
Good Life
Hazel Ipp
Heart Welled
Heritage Language
identity formation
immigrant
Immigrant Accounts
Immigrant Analyst
Immigrant Patients
Irene Cairo
Jeanne Wolff Bernstein
Jhumpa Lahiri
Lama Zuhair Khouri
Migratory Displacement
mourning processes
Multilayered Experience
Muslim World
Post-migration Contexts
Pratyusha Tummala-Narra
Primal Scream Therapy
psychological impact of migration
Successful Computer Software Designer
therapeutic alliance
Uncircumcised Penis
Unfamiliar Strangeness
Vice Versa
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415741811
  • Weight: 610g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Dec 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Immigration in Psychoanalysis: Locating Ourselves presents a unique approach to understanding the varied and multi-layered experience of immigration, exploring how social, cultural, political, and historical contexts shape the psychological experience of immigration, and with it the encounter between foreign-born patients and their psychotherapists.

Beltsiou brings together a diverse group of contributors, including Ghislaine Boulanger, Eva Hoffman and Dori Laub, to discuss their own identity as immigrants and how it informs their work. They explore the complexity and the contradictions of the immigration process - the tension between loss and hope, future and past, the idealization and denigration of the other/stranger, and what it takes to tolerate the existential dialectic between separateness and belonging.

Through personal accounts full of wisdom and nuance, the stories of immigration come to life and become accessible to the reader. Intended for clinicians, students, and academics interested in contemporary psychoanalytic perspectives on the topic of immigration, this book serves as a resource for clinical practice and can be read in courses on psychoanalysis, cultural psychology, immigrant studies, race and ethnic relations, self and identity, culture and human development, and immigrants and mental health.

Julia Beltsiou is a psychologist in private practice in New York City, where she works with a diverse group of patients, and supervises clinicians. She is an advanced candidate at the NYU Postdoctoral Program in Psychoanalysis, and lectures nationally and internationally on the topic of the psychological experience of immigration.