Back to All Events

Race in Clinical Space

A two-part workshop with Kathy Pogue White, PhD and Jill Salberg, PhD

Attendees are registering for both sessions. It is not possible to register for just one session.

First session Saturday, September 23, 10:30 am to 12:30 pm

Second session Saturday, September 30, 10:30 am to 12:30 pm

Continued Education (CEU/CME): 4.0 credits

Fee: Attendance and CEs are free for HPC and CPC students and candidates.

$80 CPC members and students who are not affiliated with CPC or HPC

$105 nonmembers who are not students

Attendance: This is a virtual only event via Zoom

CLICK HERE TO REGISTER

This seminar attempts to raise awareness of unconscious states of mind around race in clinical work using a variation of the Balint method. This Method utilizes group engagement with a case problem brought by a case holder who describes a clinical vignette. The short vignette narrative can be a significant moment in working with a person of color (POC), either as the therapist or as a supervisor for the therapist. It can also be when both people in a dyad are white, and race is in the material, sometimes expressed, often not fully engaged. For example, the case holder feels stuck around a particular racial enactment, is puzzled by a racialized countertransference, or is curious about excessive positive or negative feelings towards the POC client/patient. Additionally, if/when both parties in the dyad identify as white, a case holder may have become aware of a gap, an absence of material relating to race.

In response to the case vignette, the group's work is to make their associative life available to the case holder in such a way as to connect to and open up their own countertransferential experiences. The Balint hypothesis is that the unconscious of all participants will be resonant and provide access to new possibilities as to feelings and ways of seeing things.

Each session will consist of a) an opening group plenary where a vignette is offered by a senior faculty person describing their work with a POC or white patient or with a training case with a POC supervisee. The focus is on collective deep listening to and clarifying the presenter's experience of working and thinking in the area of racial differences and encounters. The following two sessions provide opportunities for two volunteer Seminar members to bring case vignettes. b) Working in smaller break-out groups, the participants will use their associative life to frame a response to the presenters' posed question. The goal is learning and enlightenment about what race means in the context of clinical work, as highlighted by these examples.

Participants (candidates, faculty/supervisors, graduates, and guest colleagues) commit to attending all two sessions. Readings will be sent out a week in advance.

Learning Objectives:

  1. Participants will learn how they first became aware of race/racialization from episodes in their own life histories.

  2. Participants will identify problems in their clinical practices that derive from unconscious racism.

Kathleen Pogue White, Ph.D., Educator and Reflective Practitioner is a Clinical Psychologist, Psychoanalyst, and Principal, Pogue White Consultancy, LLC. Kathleen is a Supervising Analyst, Postdoc; Consultant, Holmes Commission, APsaA; Distinguished Member, International Society for the Psychoanalytic Study of Organizations; Founding Member, WAWI Organization Program; Founding Member, Black Psychoanalysts Speak; Founder and Co-Director, The Chocolate Salon. Kathleen authored Surviving Hating and Being Hated (2001).

Jill Salberg, Ph.D., ABPP, is faculty and supervisor at NYU Postdoctoral Program, Mitchell Center for Relational Psychoanalysis, and a member of IPTAR. Her books include Good Enough Endings: Breaks, Interruptions, and Terminations from Contemporary Relational Perspectives (2010) and Psychoanalytic Credo: Personal and Professional Journeys of Psychoanalysts (2022). She co-edited with Sue Grand, The Wounds of History: Repair and Resilience in the Transgenerational Transmission of Trauma (Gradiva Award 2018). Her forthcoming co-written book with Sue Grand, Transgenerational Transmissions, will be published as part of The Routledge Introductions to Contemporary Psychoanalysis, 2024.

Previous
Previous
May 13

The Ethics of Intervention in Religious Belief in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis   

Next
Next
November 3

Addressing Grief and Mourning in the Post-Pandemic Years