Imagining a future for psychotherapy in Aotearoa

  • Claire Miranda
Keywords: radical ethics; Donna Orange; climate crisis.

Abstract

This paper discusses Donna Orange’s idea that Levinas’s philosophical position of radical ethics, when combined with the psychoanalytic concept of intersubjectivity, could unravel blindness to the climate crisis. Genocidal colonisation by Europeans across the world is a disavowed history that has been ruinous not only for the colonised, but also for the internal worlds of the colonisers. We remain in the grip of a destructive competitive mindset, driven by the forces of shame, shame anxiety, and envy. Psychotherapists could play a part in a better future by articulating the emotional defences at play in ecocide and strengthening our own workforce and those who are fighting against the climate crisis, with group work.

Author Biography

Claire Miranda

Claire Miranda is a Pākehā psychotherapist who has been working in private practice in Whanganui-a-Tara since 2011. Initially trained in Hakomi in Sydney, she returned to New Zealand and did further training through AUT and completed the NZAP Advanced Clinical Practice qualification. Currently, Claire is training as a group therapist, partly as an exploration of how psychotherapy could adapt to the climate crisis and mitigate it. She is interested in how psychotherapy and psychotherapists can help end the Age of Oil.

Published
2022-12-30
How to Cite
Miranda, C. (2022). Imagining a future for psychotherapy in Aotearoa. Ata: Journal of Psychotherapy Aotearoa New Zealand, 26(2), 25-29. https://doi.org/10.9791/ajpanz.2022.08