Okay.
Well, thank you, Professor Mueller for the very generous introduction, and also for inviting me. I was very pleased when you wrote me and of course you know we met at Max Planck and I remember you so well because you were a star there we were so impressed by your research
and everything your presentation so it's a pleasure to come to speak with all of you here I really
look forward to the discussion and also thank you Hany for setting up everything that was very nice
so my talk today is intended to give an overview of my newly published book anxious china
inner revolution and the politics of psychotherapy by UC Press it's a pandemic baby it came out last
summer in the midst of the pandemic so let me also pause here to share the screen with you I do have
a ppt here okay here you go hope you guys can see it well okay I'm not doing a full screen because
otherwise some parts of the people would block the screen so hopefully you can see here yeah
so this is the book um I just want to briefly comment on the cover the cover image I love it's
done by a Chinese artist who is also my friend Hong Zhang it's called the breed field I first saw
this charcoal painting and I thought this image really captures the sense of anxiety and restless
I try to convey in my book so here you go that's the restless anxious china so this is an overview
at the same time towards the end of my talk I will also go in a little bit deeper for a specific
issue of the rise of therapeutic self to just give you a sense of how I as a anthropologist
approach the complexity of psychotherapy through ethnographic field work so I also heard some of
you have read my article on therapeutic self so which is wonderful so you would have a good sense
of what I'm going to talk about and that can generate more discussion later so yeah I'm going
to keep my talk a little bit shorter like 40 minutes or under I know zoom is so exhausting
people just get really tired of it all right so let's get started China's economic reform has
brought about the profound ruptures in not only social economic structures but also people's inner
landscape just give you some figures the national center for mental health in China estimated that
over 100 million Chinese people suffer from different kinds of mental illness faced with
relentless market-driven competition rapid social change and pressure to become successful many
Chinese people today are feeling restless and distressed so some of them are turning to
psychological counseling to grapple with their anguish and problems in hope for a quick fix
in this context a new therapeutic language of self-care and self-mastery along with a medicalized
language of managing anxiety depression stress is entering Chinese society so it's interesting you
have these simultaneous two languages emerging as a reporter once put it to quote that this is a
radical shift in a nation where focus on the individual was discouraged by both socialist
ideology and traditional culture unquote so my book is an ethnographic account of how a new
inner revolution is unfolding in urban China I largely cover cities only not in the countryside
as my research shows this bottom-up popular psychological movement is really reconfiguring
the self family dynamics social relations and the modes of governing so I call this phenomena the
inner revolution to highlight it's a transformative impact on so many aspects of life so even though
it's still in the early stage of development unlike some revolutions you have heard the cultural
revolution the consumer revolution and so on this inner revolution is relatively quiet but it engenders
profound changes from within and it's spreading rapidly and its impact goes far beyond the
individual realm and the clinical space so in this thriving therapeutic culture a host of work units
such as schools enterprises the police and even the military are increasingly keen to incorporate
psychological techniques into their personal management personnel management when these
organizations face multiple challenges today therefore psychological counseling I argue is
not limited to the reshaping of the individual and the family sphere but also extend into
governmental practices and the broader social domains so in this book I try to demonstrate
that the inner revolution is simultaneously personal and political intimate and social
subtle yet powerful and you will see in this book my ethnographic gaze travels from clinical space
to much broader social spaces such as family school and workplace so before I go into the book
detail let me say a few words about the context for my research since the early 1990s a side
fever that's called the has been sweeping Chinese cities now it includes a broad range of things
for example the teaching and the learning of psychology group and individual counseling
Zugänglich über
Offener Zugang
Dauer
00:40:47 Min
Aufnahmedatum
2021-06-09
Hochgeladen am
2021-06-09 21:07:08
Sprache
en-US