The Social Construction of Emotions: A New Direction in the Pastoral Work of Healing

被引:7
|
作者
McClure B.J. [1 ]
机构
[1] The Divinity School and The Graduate Department of Religion, Nashville
关键词
Carl Rogers; Catherine Lutz; Client-centered therapy; Counter-stories; Critical race feminist theory; Critical race theory; Emotions; Feelings; Healing; Health; Ian Burkitt; Michelle Rosaldo; Pastoral care and counseling; Pastoral theology; Philip Cushman; Social constructivism;
D O I
10.1007/s11089-010-0301-z
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Interviews with pastoral practitioners revealed that exploration of feelings, both personal and interpersonal, is considered the sine qua non of pastoral care and counseling. This emphasis on personal and interpersonal feelings is largely attributable to the enduring influence of Carl Rogers on contemporary pastoral care and counseling. While recognizing that Rogers was not as narrowly focused on personal and interpersonal relationships and oblivious to the larger social order than is generally assumed, I contend that he did not give sufficient attention to the fact that emotions are socially constructed and draw on recent literature on the social construction of emotions and on critical race theory to argue for a new direction in the pastoral work of healing, one that takes more adequate account of the sociocultural factors that create and sustain unhealthy emotions and that recognizes that emotions are signals about the social order. © 2010 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.
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页码:799 / 812
页数:13
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