Doing narrative counselling in the context of township spiritualities

The study describes the counselling journey undertaken with 270 patients at the Family Medicine Clinic at Kalafong Hospital in Atteridgeville, Tshwane, between June 2000 and December 2003. Of these patients 75% were women, 74% were black and 97% Christian, with half of them belonging to born-again...

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Main Author: Landman, C.(Christina)
Other Authors: Theron, J.P.J.
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10500/2289
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-unisa-oai-umkn-dsp01.int.unisa.ac.za-10500-22892016-04-16T04:07:54Z Doing narrative counselling in the context of township spiritualities Landman, C.(Christina) Theron, J.P.J. Pieterse, H.J.C. Spiritual healing Religious discourses Deconstruction Alternative God-talk Religion counselling Multi-cultural counselling Counselling women Counselling poverty Township spiritualities Born-again churches Gender and religion Narrative counselling Pastoral counselling 253.53 Narrative therapy -- South Africa -- Atteridgeville Pastoral counseling -- South Africa -- Atteridgeville Spirituality -- South Africa -- Atteridgeville Church work with the poor -- South Africa -- Atteridgeville Spiritual healing -- South Africa -- Atteridgeville Sex role -- Religious aspects -- Christianity The study describes the counselling journey undertaken with 270 patients at the Family Medicine Clinic at Kalafong Hospital in Atteridgeville, Tshwane, between June 2000 and December 2003. Of these patients 75% were women, 74% were black and 97% Christian, with half of them belonging to born-again churches. A majority of the patients (52%) were unemployed and the others employed in minimum salary jobs. A third of the patients had attemped suicide at least once before, and a third had lost at least one close family member. With these patients a narrative pastoral counselling practice was established. Narrative counselling was practised as a MEET process in which the patients' problem-saturated stories were mapped and their problems externalised; they were empowered through the deconstruction of religious problem discourses, and their alternative stories were thickened by means of religious practices. This was a pastoral practice with a focus on religious discourses as problem discourses, and on the deconstruction of these discourses towards alternatives stories of faith. The first aim of the study was to describe the faces of religious problem discourses. They are (1) power discourses that hold patients captive in divinely sanctions hierarchies of gender and class, (2) body discourses that alienated patients from their bodies, (3) identity discourses that placed the religious identities of patients in conflict with their other identities, and (4) otherness discourses that created barriers between patients and God. The second aim of the study was to describe the externalised faces of the problems ruining the patients' lives. Here Losses, Loneliness and Lack of money were described as problems causing amongst patients feelings of worthlessness, depression, paralysis, body aches and many more. The third aim of the study was to describe the characteristics of the narrative pastoral counselling practice that has been established. This practice (1) negotiates healing between binaries such as Western/African, culture and dogma/lived experience; patient passivity/patient agency; (2) respects the indigenous knowledge of patients as it is embodied in township spiritualities; and (3) aims at introducing patients to a community of care as well as a new community of discourse where they can experience spiritual healing. Practical Theology D. Th. (Practical Theology) 2009-08-25T11:02:16Z 2009-08-25T11:02:16Z 2009-08-25T11:02:16Z 2007-06-30 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10500/2289 en 1 online resource (xii, 361 leaves)
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Spiritual healing
Religious discourses
Deconstruction
Alternative God-talk
Religion counselling
Multi-cultural counselling
Counselling women
Counselling poverty
Township spiritualities
Born-again churches
Gender and religion
Narrative counselling
Pastoral counselling
253.53
Narrative therapy -- South Africa -- Atteridgeville
Pastoral counseling -- South Africa -- Atteridgeville
Spirituality -- South Africa -- Atteridgeville
Church work with the poor -- South Africa -- Atteridgeville
Spiritual healing -- South Africa -- Atteridgeville
Sex role -- Religious aspects -- Christianity
spellingShingle Spiritual healing
Religious discourses
Deconstruction
Alternative God-talk
Religion counselling
Multi-cultural counselling
Counselling women
Counselling poverty
Township spiritualities
Born-again churches
Gender and religion
Narrative counselling
Pastoral counselling
253.53
Narrative therapy -- South Africa -- Atteridgeville
Pastoral counseling -- South Africa -- Atteridgeville
Spirituality -- South Africa -- Atteridgeville
Church work with the poor -- South Africa -- Atteridgeville
Spiritual healing -- South Africa -- Atteridgeville
Sex role -- Religious aspects -- Christianity
Landman, C.(Christina)
Doing narrative counselling in the context of township spiritualities
description The study describes the counselling journey undertaken with 270 patients at the Family Medicine Clinic at Kalafong Hospital in Atteridgeville, Tshwane, between June 2000 and December 2003. Of these patients 75% were women, 74% were black and 97% Christian, with half of them belonging to born-again churches. A majority of the patients (52%) were unemployed and the others employed in minimum salary jobs. A third of the patients had attemped suicide at least once before, and a third had lost at least one close family member. With these patients a narrative pastoral counselling practice was established. Narrative counselling was practised as a MEET process in which the patients' problem-saturated stories were mapped and their problems externalised; they were empowered through the deconstruction of religious problem discourses, and their alternative stories were thickened by means of religious practices. This was a pastoral practice with a focus on religious discourses as problem discourses, and on the deconstruction of these discourses towards alternatives stories of faith. The first aim of the study was to describe the faces of religious problem discourses. They are (1) power discourses that hold patients captive in divinely sanctions hierarchies of gender and class, (2) body discourses that alienated patients from their bodies, (3) identity discourses that placed the religious identities of patients in conflict with their other identities, and (4) otherness discourses that created barriers between patients and God. The second aim of the study was to describe the externalised faces of the problems ruining the patients' lives. Here Losses, Loneliness and Lack of money were described as problems causing amongst patients feelings of worthlessness, depression, paralysis, body aches and many more. The third aim of the study was to describe the characteristics of the narrative pastoral counselling practice that has been established. This practice (1) negotiates healing between binaries such as Western/African, culture and dogma/lived experience; patient passivity/patient agency; (2) respects the indigenous knowledge of patients as it is embodied in township spiritualities; and (3) aims at introducing patients to a community of care as well as a new community of discourse where they can experience spiritual healing. === Practical Theology === D. Th. (Practical Theology)
author2 Theron, J.P.J.
author_facet Theron, J.P.J.
Landman, C.(Christina)
author Landman, C.(Christina)
author_sort Landman, C.(Christina)
title Doing narrative counselling in the context of township spiritualities
title_short Doing narrative counselling in the context of township spiritualities
title_full Doing narrative counselling in the context of township spiritualities
title_fullStr Doing narrative counselling in the context of township spiritualities
title_full_unstemmed Doing narrative counselling in the context of township spiritualities
title_sort doing narrative counselling in the context of township spiritualities
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10500/2289
work_keys_str_mv AT landmancchristina doingnarrativecounsellinginthecontextoftownshipspiritualities
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