Inferiority and bereavement: Implicit psychological commitments in the cultural history of Scottish psychotherapy |
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Authors: | Gavin Miller |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Critical Studies, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UKGavin.Miller@glasgow.ac.uk |
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Abstract: | AbstractThe author has argued that psychoanalytic psychotherapy was seen in Scotland as a way to purify Christianity of supernaturalism and moralism, and to propel the faith in a scientifically rational and socially progressive direction. In making this historiographic claim, certain disciplinary protocols are followed, such as the symmetry postulate and a deprecation of reductive psychohistorical explanation. Nonetheless, the contemporary historian of psychotherapy is a psychologized subject whose historical practice rests upon a complex, prereflective background of psychological presuppositions. |
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Keywords: | Scottish psychotherapy inferiorism discursive bereavement Christianity historiography |
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