The tyranny of ‘normality’ in the post-colonial context.
❝To be well adjusted to a sick society is hardly a great achievement!❞
The Centre for Group Analytic Studies (CGAS Cape Town) has the great pleasure of inviting you to our quarterly live webinar on Zoom by renowned group analyst, Dick Blackwell, on Saturday 15th August 11.00-12.30 (GMT +2). Dick will be presenting
THE TYRANNY OF ‘NORMALITY’ IN THE POST-COLONIAL CONTEXT
Looking for evidence-based support? Find a qualified psychologist near you through TherapyRoute.
Find a PsychologistAll diagnoses and descriptions of psychopathology imply a state of health and ‘normality’, e.g. 'Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder’ implies a ‘disorder' that is deviant from some assumed normal state of ‘order’. But the implied concepts of ‘health' and ‘normality' are seldom interrogated or deconstructed.
Yet, as one placard at a demonstration a couple of years ago pointed out, ‘To be well adjusted to a sick society is hardly a great achievement!’ In the colonial world, reality was always what the coloniser said it was. In the post-colonial world that legacy is still alive and well in the social unconscious of clinical theory and practice.
Psychoanalysis and Group Analysis tend to assume a position of scientific neutrality and objectivity. But the world view that emerges is inevitably that of the world viewed from the position of a privileged, white, western, professional, middle-class, and it is permeated by an ideology that is simultaneously denied.
Discourses on difference and diversity frequently locate ‘difference’ in the ‘other’. Deviancy from the (ideological) norm is routinely pathologised and psychotherapy becomes a technology of social management and control. Movements like Black Lives Matter and attempts to decolonise group analysis bring this situation ever more clearly into focus.
Format
11.00-12.00 Lecture
12.00-12.30 Questions and discussion
Dick Blackwell: is a psychotherapist, group analyst, organisational consultant and family therapist based in the UK. Dick graduated in business management before training as a teacher of physical education and social studies. He was a sociological researcher on a youth and community work project with black communities in the inner cities of England, and concurrently began training in group analysis and later in family therapy. He was founder and director of the Centre for Psychotherapy and Human Rights and is now Consultant in Group and Family Psychotherapy at the Baobab Centre for Young Survivors in Exile. He supervises at the Medical Foundation for the Care of Victims of Torture, where he has worked for two decades. He has written numerous articles and books on working with refugees and on the political and social contexts of psychotherapy. He is currently contributing to the struggle of the Grenfell Community for justice and democracy in its response to the well-reported fire. He is Associate Editor of Group Analysis, former Chair of Council of the IGA London, co-founder of its Organisational Consultancy Section, and a founder member of the Psychotherapy and Counselling Union.
The lecture is open to all mental health clinicians. Tickets can be purchased on Quicket (R100) using the following link:
https://www.quicket.co.za/events/109559-cgas-quarterly-lecture-on-zoom-by-dick-blackwell/
Please feel free to forward this to your professional email lists or colleagues.
We look forward to sharing the event with you.
Best regards
CGAS Faculty
email: admin@cgas.co.za
P.S. Please keep open Saturday 12th September 9.00-12.30 when Farhad Dalal will be presenting live at our Ethics Workshop!!! More information to follow.
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About The Author
CGAS
Cape Town, South Africa
“The Cape Town Centre for Group Analytic Studies offers part-time training programs and courses to people working with groups.”
CGAS is a qualified , based in Rondebosch, Cape Town, South Africa. With a commitment to mental health, CGAS provides services in , including . CGAS has expertise in .
