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Resisting the Power of Mea Culpa
Details
Through his own experience of clerical abuse and his struggle with the system that allowed it to happen, the author documents an important period of social change in Ireland. The aim of the study is to situate tough personal experiences in lifeworld contexts for the purpose of changing powerful beliefs and practices.
This is both a memoir of childhood trauma and a searing work of social criticism. Through his own experience of clerical abuse and his struggle with the system that allowed it to happen, the author documents an important period of social change in Ireland. The aim of the study is to situate tough personal experiences in lifeworld contexts for the purpose of changing powerful beliefs and practices. The author contends that psychological disciplines seldom interface with regional histories in a convincing way. The book is critical of dominant ideologies which reinforce acquiescence and exaggerate the power to act in the face of multilevel disempowerment. The author also maintains that old ways of knowing are still replicated in the structure of dominant psychological frameworks. A constancy principle of micro-regulation engenders mindful quietude and/or robust notions of psychological invulnerability. This truncated worldview comes at too high a cost. The book will be of interest to historians, social commentators, psychologists and critical theorists, as well as those in the field of trauma, addiction and psychiatry.
Autorentext
Gerard Rodgers holds a B.Sc (Hons) Psychology and a doctorate in psychotherapy. This is his second academic book.
Zusammenfassung
«For too long psychology studied issues independent of context, often leaving constituencies misunderstood, wrongly blamed and poorly supported. Mea Culpa is a brave and impressive corrective to this approach, offering new and insightful understandings of how social and religious attitudes impact every aspect of gay men's lives in Ireland. A painful yet profound contribution to the human sciences.» (Martin Milton, Regents University London)
«In an extraordinary, moving synthesis of family trauma, clerical sex abuse, and stigmatization by the Catholic Church in Ireland, Gerard Rodgers leads readers on an emotional, sometimes tragic and sometimes hopeful journey into personal suffering to uncover the indelible imprint early experiences make on self-formation. Challenging psychiatry and psychology to heed and examine the power of social contexts over human development and embodiment, the book is a courageous exposition of how socio-historic circumstances shame and shape personal histories. Refusing to disappear with his story or to surrender it to the silence that shame so often bequeaths to those who have endured trauma, Rodgers highlights how integrating academic research with lived experience offers a pathway for self-reflection, understanding, and self-love, offering a gift of hope to readers who share his experience.» (Stephanie N. Arel, Postdoctoral Fellow at the Institute for the Bio-Cultural Study of Religion, Boston University)
«Mea Culpa weaves together the recent history of Ireland, the Catholic Church, and many episodes of psychic trauma inflicted by family and church. Trauma studies frequently divide experience from theory. Gerard Rodgers locates experience as personal history, Church history, and Irish history, reminding us that trauma is always located in space and time. A brave and bold book.» (C. Fred Alford, Professor Emeritus, University of Maryland, and author of Trauma and Forgiveness 2013)
«This book takes hold of the reader, refusing to deny shame, by articulating family trauma and suffering alongside tumultuous historical and cultural contexts. Gerard Rodgers is deeply engaging, honest, and vulnerable while offering significant insights into new pathways for integrating personal experience with academic research.» (Stephanie N. Arel, Postdoctoral Fellow at the Institute for the Bio-Cultural Study of Religion, Boston University, and Author of Affect Theory, Shame and Christian Formation 2016.)
Inhalt
CONTENTS: The Context of Early Childhood - A Summarized History that Shaped Irish Values from the Mid-Nineteenth Century to the Present - The House of Fear - Recruiting Junior Vocations in the Diocese of Ardagh and Clonmacnoise - The Special Historic Relationship of the De La Salle Order and the Diocese of Ardagh and Clonmacnoise - Child Sexual Abuse in 1977/1978 Catholic Ireland - Entering the De La Salle Junior Novitiate in Castletown, Portlaoise in 1978 - The Pope's Visit to Ireland in 1979 and After - Secondary School in St Mel's College, Longford, 1979-1984 - Legal/Social Discrimination Against Gay Persons in Ireland - Further Key Themes in 1970s/1980s Ireland - Self-Injury and Active Suicidal Intent - Reconfiguring Guilt/Shame in 1990s Ireland: Struggles for Social Freedom/Equality - The Journey of Personal Recovery in a Changing Ireland - The Challenges of Confronting Childhood Sexual Abuse in Adulthood - Further Backdrop to the High Court Action in 2012 - The Diocese of Ardagh and Clonmacnoise - The Dublin Archdiocese and the Early History of De La Salle Brothers - The De La Salle Order in Dublin under Archbishop John Charles McQuaid and After - Recent Developments for the De La Salle Order and Revelations of Concealed Historic Abuses - The De La Salle Order and Other Catholic Religious Orders: Global Investment Strategies - The Current Role of the Dublin Archdiocese - The State's Role in Education: Systemic Failures in Protecting Children - Foregrounding of Charitable/Religious Patronage in Mental Health: A Critique.
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09781788746564
- Sprache Englisch
- Größe H228mm x B19mm x T156mm
- Jahr 2018
- EAN 9781788746564
- Format Kartonierter Einband (Kt)
- ISBN 978-1-78874-656-4
- Titel Resisting the Power of Mea Culpa
- Autor Gerard Rodgers
- Untertitel A Story of Twentieth-Century Ireland
- Gewicht 468g
- Herausgeber Lang, Peter
- Anzahl Seiten 332
- Lesemotiv Verstehen
- Genre Sozialwissenschaften allgemein