A sociohistorical view of group psychotherapy in the United States: the ideology of individualism and self-liberation |
| |
Authors: | van Schoor E P |
| |
Affiliation: | State Department of Mental Health, Sacramento, USA. |
| |
Abstract: | A deep strain of individualism permeates American culture, rooted in the political-economic ideology of capitalism. The ideal of a self-governing individual is promoted, independent from social, historical, and cultural forces, whose thoughts and emotions are located within the construct of a masterful self, ready to be filled and expanded. This article traces the influence of self-liberatory ideology in American group psychotherapy through the religious revivalist and Mental Hygiene movements. The "progressivism" of pioneering group theorists is examined in terms of revisionist psychology and self-liberatory practice. Psychodrama and T-groups are demonstrated to be precursors to the encounter group movement in which the belief in self-liberation reached its zenith. Early group analytic approaches are seen to eschew transpersonal and group dynamic processes. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|