<p>'This book challenged my thinking and engaged my compassion in the best possible way, prompting me to re-examine my frames of reference, the internal and cultural contexts or "ground" that inevitably influences how I engage with my clients. The exploration and analysis provided by Keith Tudor and colleagues in each paper, grounded on the principles of person-centred and transactional analysis approaches, is persuasive, humanistic, and ultimately integrative, inviting practitioners to move towards perceived cultural otherness, to balance polarities, acknowledge in(ter)dependence, and embrace the creativeness of co-creation. This book is a valuable resource for every therapist intending to practice in a culturally sensitive and reflective way'.</p><p><b>- Mihili Alexander</b>, <i>Cross-cultural Psychotherapist and Supervisor, Auckland, Aotearoa New Zealand</i></p><p>'I appreciate Tudor’s attention to the role of culture in both the training of therapists and in the understanding of self and of the clients one serves. As a transactional analyst since 1975, I have often been discouraged to see how many in our discipline do not make this aspect central to our work. Individuals influence systems and can impact culture (or at least our responses to it). Therapists and trainers have power to support themselves and their clients in seeing how part of their personal healing can involve addressing systemic and cultural barriers that may cause and/or exacerbate mental distress. The papers in this book engage with influence and impact, support, and connection'.</p><p><b>- Valerie A. Batts</b>, <i>PhD, Licensed Clinical Psychologist, Founding Director/Senior Consultant VISIONS, Inc., Edenton, North Carolina, United States of America</i></p><p>'The ideas that are presented in this book are central to an understanding not only of culture and the cultural conditions of therapy but to engage with authentic and anti-discriminatory therapeutic practice. This book is a real gift as it provides important insights, which help us to go beyond navigating the contours of cultural variables as it encourages a return to valuing our interconnectedness as culturally diverse people, living in a wider ecosystem. It is also deeply moving, and a vital, compelling, highly engaging book that will be a key text for all those interested in cross-cultural encounters, theory, and ethical practice'.</p><p><b>- Divine Charura</b>, <i>Professor of Counselling Psychology, York St John University, York, United Kingdom</i></p><p>'We are living in a time when fundamental assumptions that stabilise a community’s shared sense of reality and delineate the boundaries and norms of selfhood and relationship are colliding, rupturing, and unravelling. Once-settled collective psyches across the world are all subjected to forces of disruption at a dizzying pace forcing people to renegotiate everything, everywhere, all at once. If ever there was need for psychotherapy to respond to such cultural upheavals it is now.</p><p>The power of these essays lies in Tudor’s long-standing commitment both to advancing a psychotherapy framework based in a radical person-centred philosophy and, at the same time, critically reflecting on the epistemological and praxiological abuses that stem from applying the Euro-American paradigm that has dominated the psychotherapy field as if it were universal. As the world struggles with the existential challenges of post-modernity, where old certainties are dissolving, it will need psychotherapy frameworks that do justice to multiple viewpoints without losing reverence for the lived experience of unique persons in their diverse cultures. In the new context of intractable uncertainty this collection by Tudor and his culturally diverse group of colleagues offers an inspiring and well-grounded contribution to this project'.</p><p><b>- Maureen O'Hara</b>, <i>Professor of Psychology (Emerita), National University, San Diego, California, Former President, Saybrook University, San Francisco, California, United States of America</i></p>

This book represents the author’s extensive experience in the field of psychotherapy, counselling, and mental health over four decades.

It focuses on the culture of psychotherapy and counselling in context, made more relevant and dialogic with the inclusion of reflections from colleagues from South Asia on each chapter. Informed by person-centred psychology and transactional analysis, and the book takes a meta-view of the different elements that influence the internal and external worlds of both the therapist and the client. Concepts of space, time, place, and persons are contextualised in and across different cultures. The book very succinctly describes life with its polarities of suffering and hope, and anxieties and satisfaction within the uniqueness of the therapeutic relationship.

This volume is the outcome of extensive research, a wide range of experiences, and a synthesis of different therapies and minds. It is an excellent guide for therapists, both beginning and experienced. This book will be useful to students, researchers, teachers, and supervisors working in the fields of psychology, psychotherapy, counselling, social work, and sociology. It will also be an invaluable companion to educationalists and practitioners in these fields.

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This book represents the authors' extensive experience in the field of psychotherapy, counselling, and mental health over four decades. It focuses on the culture of psychotherapy and counselling in a coherent context, making the whole work more relevant and dialogic by inviting colleagues from South Asia to reflect on each chapter.

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About the Editor x

Contributors xi

Forewords xvi

Introduction 1

Keith Tudor

PART 1

Concepts 7

1 Space: The philosophy of Temenos (1999) 9

Keith Tudor and Louise Embleton Tudor

Reflection by A. Geethan and Anuradha Kannan

2 Time (2001, 2002, 2008) 17

Keith Tudor

Reflection by C. Suriyaprakash

3 Persons, polarities, and positions (2007) 39

Keith Tudor

Reflection by P. K. Saru

4 Interdependence (2018) 53

Keith Tudor

Reflection by Haseena Abdulla

5 Alienation (2018) 67

Keith Tudor

Reflection by Deepak Dhananjaya

PART 2

Cross-cultural encounters 85

6 Cultural conditions (1997) 87

Jasvinder Singh and Keith Tudor

Reflection by Sailaja Manacha

7 ‘Reading the air’ (2016) 107

Noboru Komiya and Keith Tudor

Reflection by Aruna Gopakumar

8 Family: The fa’asamoa (2017) 122

Julia Ioane and Keith Tudor

Reflection by Prathitha Gangadharan

9 He tangata Tiriti tātou (2021) 138

Keith Tudor

Reflection by Shoba Nayar

10 On new ground (2020) 148

Brian Rodgers and Keith Tudor

Reflection by Suvarna Puranik

11 Bicultural encounter (2022) 165

Shirley Rivers, Brian Rodgers, Janet May, and Keith Tudor

Reflection by Deepak Dhananjaya

12 War (2022) 183

Keith Tudor

Reflection by Mitra Heidari

PART 3

Practice and theory 201

13 Co-creation (2019) 203

Keith Tudor

Reflection by Gunjan Zutshi

14 Teaching (2009) 219

Keith Tudor

Reflection by Nisha Rao

15 Supervision (2021) 244

Keith Tudor

Reflection by Chitra Ravi

References 267

Index 300

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781041137160
Publisert
2026-02-27
Utgiver
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Vekt
610 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
312

Redaktør

Biografisk notat

Keith Tudor is professor of psychotherapy at Auckland University of Technology, Aotearoa New Zealand, where he is also a co-lead of the research group, Moana Nui Psychological Therapies Research Group.