Explaining changes in the political consciousness of the oppressed using the ideas of Paulo Freire, Albert Memmi, and Jungian psychology, this original book explores how psychological bonds of oppression are broken and offers a psychopolitical theory for the analysis of the autobiographies of four Native people in Guatemala and Canada.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
"With the help of Paulo Freire and C.G. Jung, Lawrence R. Alschuler explores the social and psychological nature of oppression. He shows how liberation is an inner and outer process. This is not just a theoretical book on the politics of psychology or the psychology of politics. Rather, The Psychopolitics of Liberation is about how real people,suffering from social wounds,achieved liberation. This book is about the future of psychology and politics."
- Arnold Mindell, author of Sitting in the Fire and The Deep Democracy of Open Forums
"Lawrence R. Alschuler understands both psychology and political science well and applies the disciplines to each other, backwards and forwards, creatively. Alschuler's project of bringing together the liberation theory, Jungian psychology, and political economy is unique and uniquely important. The book contains an original synthesis of existing authors from disparate, and often conflicting, fields; bringing them together is brilliant."
- Demaris Wehr, Ph.D., psychotherapist in private practice, and author of Jung and Feminism: Liberating Archetypes
- Arnold Mindell, author of Sitting in the Fire and The Deep Democracy of Open Forums
"Lawrence R. Alschuler understands both psychology and political science well and applies the disciplines to each other, backwards and forwards, creatively. Alschuler's project of bringing together the liberation theory, Jungian psychology, and political economy is unique and uniquely important. The book contains an original synthesis of existing authors from disparate, and often conflicting, fields; bringing them together is brilliant."
- Demaris Wehr, Ph.D., psychotherapist in private practice, and author of Jung and Feminism: Liberating Archetypes