An intersubjective approach to cross‐cultural clinical work
- 1 March 1999
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Smith College Studies in Social Work
- Vol. 69 (2) , 269-291
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00377319909517555
Abstract
The cross‐cultural clinical encounter is fraught with anxieties, fears, biases, and misunderstandings that are experienced by both members of the therapeutic dyad. Through their articulation mainly within the intersubjective dimension of co‐experience, these subjective states, if unacknowledged by the dyad, can seriously impact, derail, and even prematurely truncate the treatment process. This paper focuses particularly on the therapist's subjective state in the process of cross‐cultural clinical work, describing its dynamic action through what the author terms “the clinician's cultural countertransference. “This is a complex matrix of pre‐existing cognitions and affects about cultural groups that operates at multiple levels of consciousness within the therapist's psyche and can be communicated to ethnic clients at varied points of interpersonal and intersubjective contact. Substantial case illustrations are used to illuminate these dynamics, emphasizing both the therapist's culturally driven subjective experiences and mode of clinical intervention.Keywords
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