Description
Jungian Reflections on Systemic Racism is a unique contribution of Jungian analysts and analysts-in-training who provide individual perspectives and approaches to promoting greater inclusivity in analytical theory, training and practice.
This book examines issues of racism through intrapsychic, interpersonal, and archetypal lenses. Drawing from the specificity and ingenuity of Jungian psychoanalysis, the authors provide personal narratives, clinical vignettes, and theoretical perspectives that exemplify ways of comprehending and furthering the work of anti-racism. The editors assert that without deeper exploration of our theories, distinguishing between the theory itself and the theorist’s unconscious biases, our clinical paradigms unconsciously align and thus perhaps promote an attitude of white supremacy in psychoanalytic training programs and practices. Without claiming to reflect the official view of any particular psychoanalytic community, it utilizes Jung’s analytic paradigm to offer insight into the dynamics of the cultural complex of racism from a depth psychological perspective.
Jungian Reflections on Systemic Racism is an important resource for psychoanalytic students, trainees, supervisors, and practitioners, as well as for clinicians, medical professionals, social workers, mental health professionals, sociologists, and anyone interested in the wide impact of the unscientific construct of 'race’.
Table of Contents
Notes on Contributors
Forward
Harry Wells Fogarty
Introduction
Christopher J. Carter and Tiffany Houck-Loomis
The Structure of this Book
1. Time for Space at the Table: an African-American / Native-American analyst-in-training's first hand reflections. A call for the IAAP to publicly denounce (but not erase) the White supremacist writings of C.G.Jung
Christopher Jerome Carter
Appendix A: A call for the International Association for Analytrical Psychology to take corrective actions, publicly denunciating (but not erasing) the White supremacist writings of Carl Gustav Jung
Christopher Jerome Carter
2. The Paradox and the Primitive and Jung's Relation to 'Negroes'
Ann Ulanov
3. The Smoking Mirror
Deborah Fausch
4. On Failings
Sherry Salman
5. From Ghost to Ancestor: transforming Jung's racial complex
Amy Bentley Lamborn
6. The Whiteness Complex: breaking the spell
John Michael Hayes
7. The Sunken Place: silence as the propagation of toxic whiteness
Tiffany Houck-Loomis
8. Reparative Transgression: a psychoanalytic institute reckons- and does not reckon- with its own racism
Sarah J. Braun



