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Psychosis, Spirit Possession, and Child Sexual Abuse

A Jungian, Depth, and Liberation Psychology Perspective

Hazel Da Breo

$62.99

Paperback

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English
Routledge
12 November 2024
This distinctive volume examines the psychological claims of spirit possession and psychosis as they are linked to child sexual abuse, intimate partner violence, and poor mental health.

In the context of both clinical complaints and community-based determinants, this book uses Jungian and Fanonian theory, political history, and case study analysis to explore the systems at work in projecting internalized traumas of colonialism and personal powerlessness onto a scapegoated demonic presence affecting victims/survivors of sexual violence. It focuses on populations of the global south but is relevant to victims of oppression worldwide, considering the personal unconscious and cultural complexes that influence a sense of being overtaken and controlled by supernatural or intrapsychic forces, or a desire to be.

Psychosis, Spirit Possession, and Child Sexual Abuse offers an alternative framework for understanding mental processes that lead to symptoms such as auditory or visual hallucinations that often get misdiagnosed and mistreated. This is important reading for practitioners and scholars of depth psychology and is of keen interest to academics in the fields of foreign and cultural studies, as well as students and researchers in sociology, religion, or anthropology.
By:  
Imprint:   Routledge
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
ISBN:   9781032122113
ISBN 10:   1032122110
Pages:   144
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Primary ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming
Introduction Part 1: Psychosis 1. Carrie 2. Melanie 3. Bystander Mobilization 4. The Boy 5. Coco 6. Nile 7. Maddinks the Mute 8. Elusine 9. The Counsellor Part 2: Spirit Possession 10. Vladimir 11. Yara: The Transcendent Part 3: Rise of the Dark Feminine 12. Bahira

Hazel Da Breo, PhD, is a Canadian scholar-practitioner of Grenadian birth and Indigenous ancestry. She has co-authored three academic texts on Child Sexual Abuse in the Carribean and numerous articles on a variety of psychological subjects. Da Breo is a graduate of a master’s degree program in Depth Psychology (Pacifica Graduate Institute), Adult Education (Yorkville University) and Art History (York University). Her PhD in Psychotherapeutic Counseling is from the Open International University. She is a Professor of Psychology at St. George’s University, and her current research interests include the Neuroscience of Trauma and the Philosophy of Cultural Psychiatry.

Reviews for Psychosis, Spirit Possession, and Child Sexual Abuse: A Jungian, Depth, and Liberation Psychology Perspective

This unique and pioneering work embarks on a bold exploration of the complex intersections between mental health, spiritual experiences, and the trauma of child sexual abuse. Hazel Da Breo's insights and compassionate approach offer hope and understanding for those navigating the aftermath of profound trauma. Arising from decades long work as a psychologist and heavily influenced by phenomenology and spirituality, her work is not only an academic and therapeutic achievement but also offers deeply moving narratives that honor the lived experiences of survivors. As a Co-Founder of an organization dedicated to combating violence against women and girls as an issue of structural discrimination, I believe Da Breo's contribution to our understanding of trauma and the paths to recovery is significant. I believe that this book will be an invaluable resource for therapists, survivors, scholars, activists, and anyone committed to the deep work of healing and liberation. Jaspreet Singh, JD, Co-Founder, ICAAD 'Page by page Hazel Da Breo in Psychosis, Spirit Possession and Child Sexual Abuse: A Jungian, Depth and Liberation Psychology Perspective, challenges our view of trauma or better said our view of an objective reality. She argues our heuristic scientific training as therapists detaches and distances us from our child abuse patients’ experience and our own humanity. It denigrates insights of thinkers such as Jung and Fanon, Sufi Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee and Jean-Martin Charcot. She, as a fellow traveler among them, is an unapologetic phenomenologist. She places the lived experience of our patients, from the banal and quotidian to the worrisome and terrifying to the pleasurable and numinous, at the core of how we can help resolve their suffering. She presents us with accounts of ten children, each of whom jumps to life in her telling. They have experienced terrible acute experiences and chronic dysregulating quotidian experiences. The chronic experiences are what I call the in-between times. The in-between times are the child’s reiterated moment-by-moment growth distorting, benign or growth enhancing experiences with others that fill the child’s life between the acute events. It is repetition of the banal experiences of the child in the in-between times that sculpt how the child sees the world and her way of being in the world. Simultaneously, as Da Breo gets us inside the child to see how the child experiences the world, rather than how we would see the child’s world, she raises our thinking to the possibility of psychosis as a cultural manifestation of spirit possession. And while admitting that the full range of specific factors that affect children of specific groups is unknown, she presses us to consider Indigenous practices, colonization, social adversity, racism, exclusion, city vs. rural living along with other factors as playing a role. Da Breo’s book will bring you back to the essence of doing the work we love. Even those of you who view children’s trauma as an objective outcome of distorted brain processes, Da Breo’s writing, even if it does not change one neural network in your prefrontal cortex, will expand how you think and work with your traumatized patients.' Ed Tronick, PhD, Professor of Psychiatry and Pediatrics, University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School


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