The British Gestalt Journal Seminar Day is an annual event bringing
together friends, readers, writers, editors and reviewers of the
journal. This year Michelle Billies, an Assistant Professor at the
City University of New York and a member of the New York Institute for
Gestalt Therapy and Sissy Lykou, a lecturer at Roehampton University
and integrative Dance and Movement Therapist will explore the themes
of anti-black racism and difference within the context of Gestalt
Therapy and beyond.
* 'How/Can Gestalt Therapy Promote Liberation from Global Anti-Black
Racism?’ by Michelle Billies
* 'Globalisation, neo-liberalism and explicit individual differences
demonstrated on our bodies: Moving in the sound of silence’ by Sissy
Lykou
How/Can Gestalt Therapy Promote Liberation from Global Anti-Black
Racism?
MICHELLE BILLIES
Anti-black racism is a pervasive, global phenomenon that has
fundamentally shaped the modern era and its liberal institutions,
including Gestalt therapy. Examining systemic anti-black racism makes
it possible to examine the depth of its embeddedness and ongoing power
in liberal societies. As a devotee of Gestalt therapy theory and
methods, I question whether Gestalt Therapy has the tools and theory
needed to work through the realities of anti-black racism and how it
might (further) develop them. This also means exploring what it means
to support Black liberation, from the Black Lives Matter movement in
the U.S. to justice for the Windrush generation in the U.K., to
ensuring civil and human rights for African immigrants across
Europe.
In this talk, I will discuss the importance of:
* examining Gestalt Therapy's role in perpetuating anti-black
racism,
* analyzing how one's position in society is shaped by anti-black
racism and white supremacy,
* thinking about how racial and ethnic oppression takes many forms,
as seen in the immigration crisis and rising populist nationalism
across cultures, and
* what Gestalt Therapy has and needs to strengthen its ability to
undo fixed Gestalts of anti-black racism.
Examples will include the work of Human Rights & Social Responsibility
Committee of EAGT, combined with nascent efforts in two U.S. training
institutes.
Biography: Michelle Billies, Ph.D, LCSW-R is an Assistant Professor
at Kingsborough Community College of the City University of New York
where they* teach critical multicultural counseling courses. Billies'
research centers on racial justice, state violence and proactive
civilian responses, and low income, racially and ethnically diverse
lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and gender nonconforming
community issues. Billies has been a Gestalt psychotherapist for over
15 years, and teaches sociocultural theory and practice at the Gestalt
Center for Psychotherapy and Training in New York City. They are also
a parent to an amazing 4 year old. *The pronoun "they" is singular
for someone who identifies as gender nonconforming.
***
Globalisation, neo-liberalism and explicit individual differences
demonstrated on our bodies: Moving in the sound of silence
SISSY LYKOU
In our era of permanent crisis, the need to process thoughts and
feelings concerning any kind of difference is profound and pressing.
The media continuously highlight what is acceptable and what is not:
weight, colour of skin, shape of nose and so on. Those who don’t
tick the trendy boxes are effectively silenced.
By stimulating imagination, fantasy and play-in-relationship, Dance
Movement Psychotherapy (DMP) facilitates positive and confident
attitudes to difference. In this experiential workshop, based on DMP
you will be invited to reflect on what you and your clients bring to
sessions in terms of embodied and displayed differences.
Through movement and other creative means, the possibilities and
limitations of working with people we perceive externally as
‘different’ from us will be explored. We will own how our own
biases and blind spots are communicated in the intersubjective field
between us and our clients. We will also see how interactions and
communications grounded in the body can introduce new ways of thinking
and acting in relation to ‘difference’.
Ultimately, the workshop reframes therapy thinking concerning
acceptance and empathy in terms of what these therapy values can
contribute to real-world politics. And the opposite is also true: we
will see how society’s struggles over inclusion and exclusion
illuminate all aspects of work in the helping professions.
WHAT WILL YOU GAIN FROM THIS WORKSHOP?
* To experience how your body expresses your relational responses to
others.
* To consider new ways of thinking about the management of
difference in diverse societies.
* To learn how to combine non-verbal with verbal dialogue in the
exploration of relationships.
You don’t have to be ‘good at dancing’ to enjoy this session.
And we will also talk!
Biography: Sissy Lykou is a UKCP and Association for Dance Movement
Psychotherapy registered integrative psychotherapist, dance movement
psychotherapist and supervisor. She was an A.S. Onassis Foundation
Scholar. Sissy practices in London privately and in community
psychotherapy projects for children under five years of age and their
parents/carers. She lectures on several universities and professional
training programmes in the UK and Europe, has worked on EU research
projects at the Universities of Heidelberg and Athens, serves on
journal editorial boards, and has published in books and international
journals. Sissy was a member of the Steering Group of Psychotherapists
and Counsellors for Social Responsibility, and has been the clinical
community and outreach lead of Stillpoint Spaces London since its
beginning.
***
Practicalities
In addition to a healthy and tasty organic
gluten-free lunch, participants are invited to support the British
GESTALT JOURNAL BY BAKING gluten-free cakes to share with the
community. Savoury food will be provided by Dora Johnston from the
Home Grown Catering Company
(https://thehomegrowncateringcompany.wordpress.com
[https://thehomegrowncateringcompany.wordpress.com]). 5.5 Continuous
Professional Development hours will be offered to all attendees.
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25/11/2018 Last update