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Feminism, therapy and narrative
ideas:
Exploring some not so commonly asked
questions
compiled by Shona Russell & Maggie
Carey 1
In this paper we have been interested to
engage with some not so commonly asked questions about
feminism, therapy and narrative ideas. So we asked a number
of therapists who are engaged with narrative ideas some
questions about what feminism means to them, how it
influences their work and what feminist issues they are
currently grappling with. What followed was an invigorating
and challenging process.
Many of the people we approached
expressed that they wished they could spend more time
thinking about these sorts of questions. Some people spoke
of regret that these sorts of conversations are not more
common.
In response, we would like to invite all
readers to become involved in an ongoing project around
these issues. In future editions of the International
Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work we will be
organising a regular column on the theme 'feminism, therapy
and narrative ideas'. At the end of this piece we have
listed a number of different themes about which we would
love to hear from practitioners. We hope that the following
questions and answers will spark your imagination and that
you will then write to us with your thoughts and
reflections.
But first, on with the questions: and
perhaps the first one is the most difficult
What is
feminism?
1. What is feminism?
In collating this piece, what was very
clear is that feminism means very different things to
different people. This, of course, has always been true. As
an appendix to this piece we have tried to summarise some of
the different expressions of feminism in recent history.
These include 'liberal feminism', 'radical feminism',
'socialist feminism', 'feminisms of black/Indigenous/women
of colour', 'poststructuralist feminism', 'French feminisms'
and more recently 'queer feminism'.
To begin this piece though, we thought we
might simply include quotes from a number of different
respondents which describe what feminism means to them.
Feminism is my primary lens for
analysing differences of power in the world. For some women,
the primary lens through which they see the world, their
primary form of analysis about differences in power, is a
lens of culture, of race. For other women, their primary
lens might be sexuality and sexual difference. For me,
though, the first thing that I notice is gender. Feminism is
the lens which I then try to use to understand other
relations of power and my responsibilities in relation to
them.
As an African-American woman, the way
that feminism lives in my life is influenced by the lives of
my mother and other working-class Black women who would
never dare to call themselves feminist. This brand of
feminism is about the ability to tell the truth about the
influence of patriarchy in limiting our lives, it's about
being clear about the linked oppressions of racism, sexism
and classism and the necessity of addressing all of these
issues if we are to really fulfil our potential. What I
respect most about the feminist values that emerged from my
mother's experiences is that they are grounded in love and
caring for Black women and a willingness to witness each
other's lives and hold our stories sacred. One of my
mother's greatest gifts was to teach me to love women and
therefore love myself. She also modelled for me how to fight
for justice and that the things that I love are worth
fighting for. So part of what feminism means for me is an
active loving of women and a commitment to remove all
barriers that limit our social, political, economic, sexual
and spiritual potential.
My parents, throughout my childhood
related to me with great respect and would intervene if
other adults acted in disrespectful ways. They wouldn't
allow other adults to tell me off. Even before I was born
they had taken great care of me. They had thought about my
birth. I was brought lovingly into this world with great
care. They had all sorts of ideas about bringing up kids in
the world that I think were incredible. I guess they were
influenced by the feminist changes that were happening in
the world at that time in the mid-1970s. As young women, my
friends and I have often been told, particularly by
teachers, that we will grow out of our feminism, that it is
simply a stage that we are going through. We are faced with
the dominant message that feminism is about being equal to
men, about having the same choices as opposed to changing
the fabric of our culture. It is not surprising that it can
be difficult for young women to claim a feminist identity. I
am beginning to realise that growing up with an awareness of
feminism is a privilege and that it brings responsibilities
in relation to the ways in which I respond to other people
who may not have had that privilege. Now that I have left
school I am trying to understand more about what it means to
be middle-class, privileged and a white Australian. What is
my responsibility as a young feminist to address issues of
race, class and heterosexual dominance?
The first time I thought of feminism
was when I was seven. I had to do the dishes while through
the window I could see my brothers playing cricket free of
any domestic responsibilities. I knew something wasn't
right. My mother was president of the parents' and friends'
association at my brothers' school, while she hardly
participated at all at my school. These experiences made me
question what was going on, and the questioning has
continued. That's what feminism is to me, a determination to
question.
I really came to value feminism in my
mid-life. In my younger years what mostly shaped my
experience was my mother's struggle with severe depression.
Her experience, and subsequently our family's experience,
led me to have a keen determination for alternative mental
health practices that do not categorise and demean people.
In my work as a therapist, feminism has come to be a key
influence in how I understand my work and my world. It helps
me to make sense of the things I hear and see. It is a
framework that I am hoping I can pass on to my children,
both male and female, as it is something that has become
precious to me.
My involvement with feminism grew out
of my grappling with issues of sexuality. Becoming part of
the lesbian community, I found that many of the dykes I knew
were feminist and their perspectives on the world, shared
through conversations and political action, made a lot of
sense to me. Bringing a feminist analysis to my experiences
of growing up female in a migrant family in rural Australia
was like turning on the lights and opening many doors of
understanding, and this helped me to create a language for
many of my previously unstoried experiences. Many, but not
all. It wasn't a simple fit! There were complications around
matters of race, culture and class &endash; as well as
sexuality. Initially, 'feminist', as with 'Lesbian', was not
an identity that I wholeheartedly wanted to claim. I found
that negotiating differences within feminist circles
determined to create a unified sisterhood was, at times,
impossible for me. Feminist thinking has since expanded in
multiple directions. Conundrums, contradictions and
complexities are not just accepted, but expected. Since my
first encounters with feminism in the late seventies, I have
spent much of my working life within organisations dedicated
to improving women's lives. Feminist ideas continue to be
central to the way I understand the world, and 'feminist' is
one of the identities I now proudly claim.
2. How has feminism influenced our lives?
When we look back over time, it is
vividly apparent how much has changed in the lives of women
in this country over the last thirty-five years, and
particularly for white middle-class women. What's more, it
is also apparent how so many of these changes have been due
to the influence of feminism &endash; feminist thinking and
feminist-inspired action.
These changes in the lives of women have
also led to transformations in the fields of social work and
therapy. We would like to try now to offer readers a glimpse
of just how much has changed in thirty-five years.
Feminism ushered in enormous changes for
women in the workforce. Thirty-five years ago there was not
equal pay for women and men. Men would be paid more than
women for doing the same job. In women-dominated fields,
such as social work, immediately upon graduation men would
be offered senior positions in which they supervised and
managed female workers. What's more, women had to leave the
public service if they got married. There was no equivalent
to current day maternity leave (let alone paternity leave)
and state childcare services did not exist. More than this
though, education for girls and women was not highly
regarded and so the pathways to employment were severely
limited. This has all changed in thirty-five years. The vast
majority of young Australian women would now expect, as
their right, an access to education and equal opportunity to
employment as their brothers. These profound changes are due
to feminist action.
Thirty-five years ago there was not the
same language as exists today to describe domestic violence,
rape or child sexual abuse. There were no shelters for women
escaping violence in their intimate relationships. There
were no rape crisis centres. There were no services
responding to child abuse. Feminism brought the issue of
violence against women into the light, created safe places
for women to turn and demanded changes to the law. Laws were
introduced to outlaw rape in marriage (which had previously
been legal). Conjugal rights (the rights of men to be sexual
with women to whom they were married &endash; even if
separated) were overturned. Anti-stalking legislation was
introduced and campaigns for the law to prioritise the
safety of women were conducted. Importantly, social security
support was established that made it more possible for women
to leave violent situations.
The changed awareness surrounding child
sexual abuse is perhaps the most startling. Where once
rarely talked about, or described as incest, feminism
brought a new consciousness to the pervasiveness and effects
of child sexual abuse. Books such as Biff Ward's
Father-Daughter Rape (1984) also reconceptualised the issue
as one of power relations and abuse. With this new awareness
came new responses, in terms of services and legal changes.
Child witness support programs were established. In time,
the work of feminist women around issues of child sexual
abuse has made it possible for the sexual abuse of men and
boys to also be acknowledged and for support to be made
available.
Simultaneously, feminism brought new
possibilities for ways in which we as women could relate to
our own bodies. Whereas once our bodies and experiences had
only been written about and described in the professional
world by men, this all began to change. Landmark
publications such as Our Bodies, Our Selves (first published
in 1970, see The Boston Women's Health Book Collective
1998), began to offer women new ways of caring for and
having pride in our own bodies. Around
the same time, women's health services
began to offer support and health care from a completely
different woman-centred perspective. These changes also
included re-evaluating sexuality and sexual practices.
Publications such as 'The myth of the vaginal orgasm' (Koedt
1970) questioned how heterosexual sexual relations had been
constructed and created room for women's sexual imaginations
to flourish. The work of lesbian and gay liberation
activists also questioned taken-for-granted heterosexual
dominance and created new options for
ways women could live their lives.
Issues of childbirth and abortion were
also key areas of change. Whereas childbirth had been a
domain dominated by male doctors, feminism demanded changes
to the ways in which women were supported during labour,
during childbirth and after birthing. An elevated respect
for home births, for birthing clinics and for the work of
midwives were key advances as women's experiences and
knowledges about birthing and pregnancy have been and
continue to be reclaimed. The legalisation of abortion and
the development of reliable and safe forms of contraception
were also the result of key feminist struggles and have
resulted in changes to women's lives that were once
unimaginable.
Parenthood has now become a matter of
choice whereas for generations of women it was a duty. There
have been many further changes both within family homes, in
the streets and in workplaces. Where once taking pride in
being a woman was difficult to conceive,
it is now a central aspect of many
women's identities. Where once women were routinely held
totally responsible for any problem or difficulty in family
life, now woman-blaming is not the only currency available
for discussing family matters.
3. How has feminism influenced the world
of therapy?
Not only has feminism brought changes to
the lives of women and families, but it has also contributed
to the transformation of the work of therapists. Because
these changes have been so pervasive, it can be difficult at
times to recall what the therapy world was like before
feminism.
Perhaps the greatest single change is
that matters of gender are now acknowledged as relevant to
the therapeutic endeavour. Where once therapy was seen as
'gender-neutral', now it is acknowledged that gender
relations not only shape the experiences of individuals and
families, but that they also influence therapy conversations
(Hare-Mustin 1978). Prior to feminist thinking, textbooks
and counselling teaching was male-centred, in that they took
men's experience as the norm by which to judge life. The
gendered nature of these assumptions once went unquestioned.
Early feminist family therapists began to
bring an analysis of gender into therapeutic inquiry. These
women included Rachel Hare-Mustin (1978, 1987, Hare-Mustin
& Marecek 1990), Marianne Walters, Betty Carter, Peggy
Papp and Olga Silverstein of the Women's Project in New York
(1988), and Monica McGoldrick, Carol Anderson and Froma
Walsh (1989). Here in Australia, Kerrie James' influential
keynote address, 'Breaking the chains of gender' was an
early example (see James 2001; James & McIntyre 1983).
These feminist inquiries opened up new ways of understanding
people's lives and family relationships and therefore
created new possibilities as to ways of talking about the
problems people brought to therapy.
The phrase, 'the personal is the
political' represents one of feminism's key theoretical
contributions. This phrase represents a commitment to
understand people's personal experiences as influenced by
broader relations of power. In this way, a woman's personal
experiences are not solely her own, they are linked to other
women's experiences, they are linked to a broader politics.
(This linking of personal experience to broader politics has
also been a key aspect of other movements for social change
such as civil rights movement, black power, and gay
liberation, but it was feminism that articulated it in this
way.)
We have tried to list here a range of
circumstances in which a feminist consciousness in relation
to 'the personal is the political' has changed therapeutic
work. The following examples of practice are all related to
the influence that feminism has had on therapeutic practice.
Taking care when a woman seeks
counselling because of depression to explore the broader
context of this experience &endash; both in relation to
poverty and socioeconomic issues, and also in terms of her
relationships and any ways in which this depression could be
being supported by sexist/heterosexist assumptions and
interactions. (As mentioned above, the work of Phyllis
Chesler was instrumental in politicising the gendered nature
of mental health experience.)
Ensuring that responsibility for
acts of violence and abuse is not located with those who
have been subjected to it, and instead locating
responsibility with the person who enacted this violence and
abuse and the broader relations of power that make this
violence and abuse more prevalent.
The determination to enable women
and children equal opportunity to speak in therapy sessions
and to be able to articulate their own experience of and
opinions about the problem.
The mandatory reporting of child
abuse.
Offering women the choice to see
either a male or female counsellor and, where this isn't
possible, being aware and transparent about how issues of
gender may influence the counselling context.
When seeing children in therapy in
relation to reckless behaviour, truanting, fears or phobias,
always checking out the possibilities of abuse (either at
school or at home).
Ensuring that women are able to
attend counselling in confidence &endash; that what they say
will not be repeated to their partner.
Taking care to speak openly about
the incidence of domestic violence and child abuse in the
broader culture and always making it possible for people
attending counselling to talk about this.
To consistently be alert to the
influence of mother-blaming and women-blaming discourses and
find ways to name these and deconstruct their
influence.
Having an awareness of the history
of the use of tranquilisers in relation to women's
experience and therefore taking considerable care in
relation to the use of medication.
The commitment for professionals
to also share aspects of their personal experience in
writings and presentations.
The determination to name,
question and prevent professional sexual abuse.
When women seek counselling in
relation to sexual difficulties, there is now a greater
understanding of the ways in which women's sexual concerns
have traditionally been pathologised and individualised
&endash; e.g. women experiencing sexual difficulties have
often been seen to be 'frigid' or 'sexually dysfunctional'.
Attempts are now made to deconstruct and contextualise such
descriptions and alternative explanations are sought.
Matters of gender and issues of responsibility in relation
to sexual practice are much more likely to be considered.
ß There is a now an entire
world of feminist literature that is available to therapists
to read themselves, but also to make available to those who
consult them.
As well as these profound changes to the
therapy endeavour, feminist understandings have also
powerfully influenced broader fields of work, such as social
work (Hartman & Laird 1983; Hartman 1994). The ripples
of feminist thinking and action are now widely spread.
4. What are some of key feminist
contributions to narrative therapy?
In considering the feminist contributions
to narrative therapy, there are two separate realms that
seem important to acknowledge. The first is that narrative
therapy developed at a time in which feminism was
influencing the therapy world, and narrative ideas from
their conception were explicitly pro-feminist.2 The second
realm to acknowledge is the work of feminist narrative
practitioners.
Firstly, it might be useful to consider
the crucial part played by feminist ideas in questioning
certain assumptions within family therapy, and how this
questioning influenced the development of narrative therapy
in Australia and New Zealand.
In the broader context of family therapy,
feminist ideas played a crucial part in pointing out how the
premises of various theories overlooked issues of gender and
relations of power. For instance, the traditional structures
of families within structural family therapy were questioned
in terms of what effects these assumed structures had on the
lives of women and children. Strategic practice was also
questioned in terms of its gendered implications, and
certain aspects of systemic practice were also critiqued.
Feminist family therapists pointed out that when power
differences within a family system were ignored, therapy
could inadvertently become complicit with maintaining the
gender status quo (Walters, Carter, Papp & Silverstein
1988). Feminist writers began to articulate how assumptions
about male and female roles, about identity stereotypes, and
about men's domination and women's submission, were being
inadvertently reproduced in therapeutic contexts
(Hare-Mustin 1987). This was of particular concern in
relation to violence perpetrated by men against women.
Feminist therapists began to articulate the real effects of
questions such as 'What purpose is the violence serving in
the system?' and pointed out how such enquiries were
inadvertently obscuring the relations of power involved in
such violence. At the same time, some feminist therapists
also began to write about the responsibility of family
therapy to respond to lesbian experience (Roth 1985).
Gradually, feminist thinking started to
influence the field and different schools in family therapy
started to take much more account of the gendered context in
which family difficulties take place and the ideas and
beliefs that help sustain problems. Feminist therapists also
began to insist that women's experiences be defined and
described by the women themselves, rather than by the others
(often men) around them. This insistence on women defining
their own problems and their own lives led to a broader
critique of professional practices whereby which women's
experiences were defined and described by 'experts' (who
were often men).
Whilst feminists were questioning these
therapy practices, a simultaneous questioning of the family
was taking place. More particularly, feminists were pointing
out how nuclear families were, and indeed continue to be,
dangerous places for many women and children. Therapy
practices that supported nuclear family structures without
any examination of the detrimental effects of these
structures were extensively questioned (James & McIntyre
1983). Increasing attention began to be paid to people's
families of choice, as well as families of origin and
biology.
This was the historical context in which
narrative therapy developed. It was a time when there was a
great deal of energy and interest in the experience of women
in therapy, and it has been regularly acknowledged that the
feminist ideas of these times were significantly shaping of
the development of narrative therapy (see White 2001).
The influence of feminist ideas on
narrative practice is not only historic. Far from it, there
are a wide range of feminist practitioners in different
parts of the world all engaging with narrative ideas in
their own ways, and all in turn contributing to the further
developments in these ways of working. To thoroughly review
the feminist contributions to narrative therapy is not
within the scope of this short paper. However, with even a
quick glance at narrative therapy literature it is quite
clear that feminist practitioners have made, and continue to
make, diverse and wide-ranging contributions to the
development of narrative practice. Here we have simply
listed a range of areas in which feminist practitioners have
made substantial contributions. We invite readers to follow
up the references for further information.
narrative practice with women who
have experienced sexual assault (McPhie & Chaffey 1998);
violence against women (Lester
2001; WOWSafe 2001);
narrative practice with survivors
of sexual abuse (Kamsler 1990; Freer 1997; Silent Too Long
2000, Linnell & Cora 1993; Bird 2000; Mann & Russell
2002, Verco 2002);
challenging homophobia within
therapy world (Hewson 1993; Comment 1995);
eating issues (Kraner & Ingram
1998; Grieves 1997);
self-harm (Nosworthy & Lane
1998);
women's experience of hearing
voices (Power to 0ur Journeys 1999);
personal pieces telling stories of
survival and sharing women's skills and knowledges (Nichols
1999; Kathy 1999);
personal pieces by therapists
making links between the personal and the political (see
White & Hales 1997; Anderson 1995);
gender considerations in working
with couples (Freedman & Combs 2002);
considerations related to culture
and gender (Tamasese 2001);
feminist-related ethical issues
(McGrath 1999; Speedy 2001);
issues of sexuality and sexual
identity (Gibian 1999);
feminist-informed community work
(Sliep 1996; Carey 1998; Bracho 2000);
illness narratives (Weingarten
2001);
professional sexual abuse (Epston
1993);
mothering (Howard 2001; Weingarten
1997).
Feminist thinking has also influenced the
work of many men in the field, and this has been clearly
acknowledged especially in relation to work around issues of
violence and child sexual abuse (Jenkins 1990; Law 1994;
White 1995; O'Leary 1999).
Contributions of feminist narrative
practitioners extend far further. We also want to
acknowledge here the contributions that women and feminist
thinking have made to public meetings and discussions,
therapy conversations, supervision relationships,
conferences, and ways of publishing.
5. What is the fit between feminism and
some of the practices of narrative therapy?
While feminism continues to invite us to
question our practice as therapists, and later in this paper
we consider the many areas in which we are currently doing
so, there are various aspects of narrative practice that we
believe are congruent with feminist principles. These are
the aspects of narrative therapy that interest us most as
feminist practitioners, and to which we are especially
committed. Here we have tried to outline some of these
themes of practice and why we believe they share common
ground with feminist principles which we hold dear. We don't
mean to imply that narrative therapy is the only form of
therapy through which feminist principles can be engaged.
Rather we are interested in clarifying how our work is
informed by our feminist values.
* Externalising problems &endash; the
person is not the problem
One of the key contributions of narrative
therapy is the determination not to locate problems as
internal to people, but instead to externalise problems and
to understand that the ways in which problems are
constructed and experienced are related to matters of
culture and history (see Carey & Russell 2002; Epston
& White 1990). Externalising conversations involve the
identification of problems (separate from persons), locating
the problem in history and in a storyline, and tracing the
effects of the problem on the person's life and
relationships. Once a problem has been externalised in this
way it then becomes possible to identify unique outcomes
(times and ways in which a person has resisted the influence
of the problem) that can gradually be woven into alternative
story-lines. This externalising orientation can, we believe,
be engaged with in ways that are congruent with feminist
principles. To explain this, we are including the following
example of practice provided by Jussey Verco:
When a person consults me for
counselling, I am interested to know how the problems they
are experiencing relate to the whole context of their life.
Many people come through the door with a diagnosis or label
which may have been given to them by another professional,
by their friends or relatives, or perhaps by themselves.
Some of the diagnoses or labels by which women often
describe themselves include: having post-natal depression,
being anorexic, bulimic, agoraphobic, neurotic, depressive,
having 'Intermittent Explosive Disorder', the list seems to
go on and on.
Instead of going with this internalised
description of the issue they are dealing with, I am
interested to elicit an externalised definition of the
problem, one that fits closely with the woman's own
experience. This might be that 'frustration' is pushing her
around, that the 'fear' has come to dominate her life, or
that 'sorrow' has been visiting her so often these days that
it has become debilitating. Having established what the
problem is in the woman's eyes, I am interested to hear
about the history of this problem, how it fits with the
broader context of her life. I am interested to hear about
the woman's significant relationships and how these
influence or are influenced by the problem. I am
particularly interested to know how the broader context of
her life supported her recruitment into the
problem-description of herself.
For example, I worked for some time with
a woman called Anne, who had a long history of anorexia
nervosa impacting on her life. The Anorexia had completely
shaped her understandings of who she was and how she was to
live her life. The Anorexia had her thinking she was a bad
person who no longer had an entitlement to live, and that
she would 'do the world a favour if she were dead'. Anne had
been in and out of several psychiatric hospitals over her
life and had come to believe that she was psychiatrically
unbalanced. When I met with Anne,
I was interested to know about the role
which Anorexia had played in her life, especially in
relation to the hold it had over her. We had many
discussions about power and the ways in which it had been
used against her. Anne said that from a very early age, she
had had very limited opportunities to feel that she had a
say in her life, and that she had been unable to shape her
life in the directions of her own choosing. She had been
sexually abused as a child and then was physically and
psychologically abused by her husband for many years. When
she left the abusive relationship, the Anorexia stepped in
and continued to dictate the direction of her life. 'It was
like having a warring army living in my head.' She said that
it had been too frightening for her to contemplate doing
what she wanted to in life, or living her life according to
her own preferred ways.
In looking at the Anorexia as something
that was separate to her, Anne came to see the ways in which
it had been possible for it to take a hold of her. We
explored together the many things that were happening in the
context of her life such as the abuse, and the ongoing
intervention of the psychiatric system, that made her
vulnerable to the Anorexia getting such a hold. There was
also the opportunity to 'deconstruct' the power
relationships that existed within the context of abuse and
violence, and for Anne to see that the unhelpful beliefs
about herself that she'd taken on belonged back in the
context that constructed them: these unhelpful beliefs were
not the total of who she is as a person.
This externalising stance and exploration
of the history and context of the creation of the problem
(Anorexia) in Anne's life enabled us to name and acknowledge
broader relations of power and instances of injustice. It
also allowed explorations of how Anne's experiences as a
woman had been shaped by abuses of power. Over time, with
Anorexia externalised, Anne was able to begin to notice
times when she was able to reclaim her life from its
influence; the ways in which she had attempted to maintain
her health and wellbeing; and the ways in which she had
maintained connections with friends and family. As these
alternative stories of her life became more acknowledged,
Anne took further steps of reclamation, including reclaiming
laughter. Anne says that this is the most important thing to
have back in her life as it demonstrates that she is 'no
longer on the edge of the abyss' and that the Anorexia no
longer has the same control over her that it once did. In
this process, Anne's story of her identity has also changed
&endash; away from conceptions of being crazy and towards an
acknowledgement of stories of survival: 'It's not that I'm
crazy, but I have lived through crazy-making
times'.
The narrative practice of externalising
problems, locating the externalised problem in the broader
context of history and culture, and then exploring a
person's life for unique outcomes that can be linked into
preferred story-lines, fits for us with the feminist
principles of linking personal experiences to broader social
histories and practices.
As problems are located outside of
persons, it is more likely that matters of gender, class,
culture, race, sexuality and ability are considered in
therapeutic conversations. When inquiring into the history
and the context that sustains an externalised problem, it
becomes more likely that acknowledgements will be made as to
how broader relations of power have contributed to the
construction of the problem. For instance, when meeting with
a woman who has recently been through a divorce and is now
parenting young children with very few financial resources,
if the problem is named 'the Exhaustion' rather than
'Depressive Disorder' it becomes far more likely that
economic and gender relations will become an acknowledged
part of the conversation. Similarly, rather than the
solutions being looked for within the woman's psyche, or in
terms of medication, perhaps the realms of action will
include seeking both relief and redress, as well as
re-authoring her stories of life in ways that elicit the
treasured values and commitments with which the woman is
trying to raise her children.
* Story telling &endash; seeking and
co-constructing alternative stories
A second key theme of narrative practice
involves a focus on 'story' and the effects of telling
particular stories, in particular ways, in particular
contexts (White 2001). To us, this fits with the
longstanding feminist commitment to enabling women to tell
the stories of their lives and experiences with supportive
audiences in order to make new meaning out of them, and in
order to lead to transformation of experience (Laird 1989,
2001).
The women's liberation and feminist
consciousness-raising groups of the 1960s and 1970s
emphasised, amongst other things, the significance of women
being able to meet together to share and analyse the stories
of their lives, to make connections between each other's
experiences as women, and to be able to come up with
woman-centred interpretations.
Feminism's determination to create space
for the telling of women's marginal or 'unstoried'
experiences seems to fit with various narrative practices.
Within narrative therapy, particular attention is drawn to
eliciting and thickening the alternative, preferred stories
of identity. Unique outcomes become the openings for the
telling and co-creation of preferred stories, as the
following example demonstrates:
When Natalie rang to make an appointment
she asked half jokingly if I were a qualified 'shrink'. When
I asked what she meant by 'qualified', she said that she
thought that she might need to see someone who would be able
to 'put her away' if necessary. I explained that I wasn't
that person but that if she was still interested to meet
with me, we could take a look at what it was that had her
thinking that she needed to be 'put away'. Agreeing to give
it a go, we made an appointment for a few days later when I
met a unique and vibrantly dressed young women of eighteen
whose mannerisms and ways of using language were distinctly
out of the 'ordinary'.
As we explored the concerns she had about
some of the things that her family and friends were saying
about the state of her mental health, a story emerged of
'doing it differently' that had a history back into
Natalie's early childhood years. From wearing her pyjamas to
school at age five; declining at age twelve to talk to
anyone who ate meat for a period of three or four months;
wearing her hair 'shorn'; studying car mechanics; to her
recent decision to become the primary carer to an elderly
great-aunt, Natalie had never done 'what she was supposed to
do'. She never dressed as her parents had wanted and she had
never taken up the career choices that they suggested. The
school counsellor at her last school had spoken to her
parents about having Natalie assessed for possible early
presentation of Borderline Personality Disorder. Her friends
on the other hand had generally been accepting of Natalie's
difference, but this latest decision to become the primary
carer of her great-aunt had them questioning her
stability.
While the dominant story that Natalie
brought with her was one of 'mental instability', in time,
our conversations explored other ways of understanding
Natalie's actions. Rather than her actions being determined
by a 'defiance of all norms' as the school counsellor had
suggested, I began to hear the threads of an alternative
story that guided Natalie's decision-making in life. This
was a story that privileged notions of fairness. In
exploring each of the actions that had led people to worry
about Natalie's mental health, Natalie determined that her
actions were due to a commitment to what she understood as
'fair'.
She believed it was unfair of people to
eat animals, unfair that girls were supposed to dress in
certain ways differently than boys, and unfair that her
elderly aunt who was still very active should be placed in a
nursing home when all she needed was 'a bit of company'.
In beginning to elicit this alternative
story of 'a commitment to fairness', we were then able to
ask others if they had noticed this commitment and what it
meant to them. This led to conversations with Natalie's
family members in which we came to hear how Natalie had
often stood up for her younger sisters and her friends at
school. We also came to hear how Natalie's commitments had
influenced other people to care differently about the
relationships in their lives. In tracing the history of this
alternative story, this 'commitment to fairness', we began
to talk about the histories of people in Natalie's family
who had taken principled stands. Significantly we came to
hear how Natalie's elderly aunt (for whom Natalie now cares)
had always been someone who lived her own life. This
great-aunt never married and had lived a very unconventional
life for a woman of her times. Privately, Natalie told me
that she believed her great-aunt might be lesbian and that
this was something Natalie was hoping they might be able to
talk together about. Caring for this great-aunt, Natalie
said, was a way of honouring her contributions to Natalie's
life and how she hoped that one day some young woman might
feel the same way about her.
In this example, narrative practices were
used to co-author an alternative story from the dominant
plot of 'mental instability'. The alternative, preferred
story, 'a commitment to fairness' created far more options
for understanding Natalie's life as linked to the lives and
values of other people (including her great-aunt). We
believe that such a way of responding to Natalie was
congruent with feminist principles of valuing women's
stories and women's interpretations of these stories.
* Deconstructing dominant
discourses
Feminism has always been interested in
inviting women to inquire into how broader relations of
power influence the ways in which we live. Dominant
discourses of gender and other relations of power can be
deconstructed through therapeutic inquiry and the practices
and tactics of subjugating discourses can be rendered more
visible. In narrative practice, one of the ways of
deconstructing dominant and unhelpful stories that people
have about their lives is by questioning the discourses that
support these stories. In turn, this can assist women to
stop 'internalising' sexist meanings and assumptions and
instead locate these within broader patriarchal discourses,
as the following example describes.
When working with groups of women, we
have found that a light-hearted and useful way to make the
operations of a discourse really clear is to have it enacted
by one of us workers. The discourse gets played as an
externalised 'character' by someone who knows a bit about
the workings of that particular discourse, and this person
is then interviewed by the group about its tricks and
tactics. For example, in group work or community gatherings
with mothers who have experienced violence, we have often
interviewed 'Mother-blame'. We invite this 'special guest'
along to the group and the group then proceeds to interview
'Mother-blame' as if the members of the group are
investigative journalists. We ask questions that are
designed to unmask the Mother-blame's intentions, tactics
and ways of operating. We ask questions of Mother-blame such
as:
- What are you wanting to achieve in
women's lives?
- What are some of the ideas and beliefs
that are around in our culture that support your work?
- What do you try to talk women into
about themselves?
- Who are your friends and allies?
- What effects do you have on women's
relationships with their children?
- What are your favourite tricks or
tactics?'
We also explore the practices that can
undermine the operations of Mother-blame:
- What can women do to resist you getting
into their lives?
- What type of things might motivate
women to get free from your clutches?
- What sorts of places are hardest for
you to be around?
- What sorts of ideas might women have
that really get up your nose?
- What's it like to talk about yourself
in this way?
- Is it a worry to know that women are
starting to wise-up to you?
Through these conversations with
Mother-blame it quickly becomes apparent to the women in the
group that they are not the only ones who have been
influenced by this discourse. They are able to see
Mother-blame for what it is &endash; a set of unhelpful
ideas and beliefs that have women believing that they are to
blame for whatever is going on for their children, and for
the violence to which the children have been subjected.
Interviewing the discourse in this way can be very effective
in breaking the silence and secrecy that surrounds
Mother-blame (see Freer 1997).
The use of narrative practices to
deconstruct the influence of powerful discourses in people's
lives offers many opportunities for feminist-influenced
practice.
* Creating opportunities for cherished
values to become more richly described
A key element of narrative practice
involves asking questions that elicit the values and beliefs
by which people seek to live their lives. This process aims
to generate richer description of these values, to draw
these values into storylines (i.e. to trace their history
and speculate on how future actions may be shaped by them).
It is assumed that this richer description of preferred
values will then make possible other options for
living.
There are many circumstances which limit
women's chances at thoroughly exploring and enacting the
values that they cherish. The following example describes
how narrative practices can be of value in such
circumstances:
I remember a young heterosexual couple,
Jackie and Franco, who wanted to do some 'work' on their
relationship. In our first meeting, Franco expressed that he
thought that they would be best to end the relationship as
some of the differences that they were experiencing had
become 'irreconcilable'. When I asked Jackie what her
thoughts were, she replied that she wanted to make the
relationship work but she felt as though she and Franco were
on completely different wave-lengths. What Jackie hoped for
in counselling was that I could help them 'sort out their
communication problems'. Jackie had recently attended an
assertiveness training course and was learning to make 'I
statements', but they were not having any affect on Franco
who seemed incapable of 'hearing' her. Franco responded that
he did hear her, and that he believed that they already had
good communication skills and that wasn't the problem.
According to Franco the problem was a 'lack of intimacy'.
It seemed important to unpack what some
of these key phrases meant to Jackie and to Franco and why
these meanings were significant to them. As we began to
unpack the meaning of both 'good communication skills' and
'lack of intimacy' I heard how for Franco, intimacy equals
physical intimacy, while for Jackie it means an emotional
closeness. For Franco 'good communication' was about being
direct in what you say and getting to the point, whereas for
Jackie it meant having the other person understand some of
what you were experiencing and feeling. Franco mentioned
that if you asked most people, or if you looked the words up
in the dictionary, then his meanings would most probably
'win out'.
This seemed an important comment to
explore further. As we did so, we questioned together what
the effects would be if one person's understandings of life
'won out' over the other's and whether this was what they
were seeking, or whether there was something else they were
looking for. In having this conversation Jackie said that
she would value being able to step away from taking Franco's
definitions for granted and that perhaps she could take some
time to consider more fully what relationships did mean for
her.
In time, Jackie came to describe a
relationship as being 'a space to breathe out, where both
could grow', and how this requires a 'special kind of
trust'. This was the sort of relationship that was important
to Jackie, these were the ways of relating which she valued
and to which she was committed to pursuing in her life. When
we enquired as to why this was the case, Jackie was able to
speak about a friendship she had shared in her younger
years, which had the 'special kind of trust' that she valued
so highly. At the end of our conversation Jackie was
relishing, as she put it, not only the chance to have her
point of view heard, but to know more about why certain
things about relationships mattered to her. She said that
she felt more sure of what she treasured. In listening to
Jackie, Franco said that he had never heard these stories
before and that they made him think about the friendships
and relationships that had meant the most to him and why
this was so. He said he was looking forward to talking more
about this next time.
* Practices of community &endash; linking
women's lives
As feminists engaged in narrative
practice, we are particularly interested in those ways of
working that link women's lives together around shared
themes. These can include the use of outsider-witness groups
in which women act as witnesses to the lives of other women
(Carey & Russell 2003; White 2000); re-membering
practices (Russell & Carey 2002, White 1997); the use of
letter-writing campaigns; the development of leagues
(Grieves 1997); the use of groups; and the facilitation of
gatherings. As an important part of narrative practice is
the engagement of audiences to witness and authenticate
preferred stories, there are many options available within
narrative practice to link women together around certain
preferred themes, stories and values.
When Linda first came for counselling she
told me that she didn't hold out much hope for counselling
as she had tried it many times before and that she still
feels she is a 'bad' person. Linda had come to counselling
this time 'to find out whether the extreme way I react
emotionally is physical or mental'. She explained that she
was 'really down on herself' and felt like giving up. In
this first meeting I heard how Linda had recently moved away
from a relationship with her male partner and that her three
young children had moved with her. The move was planned by
Linda and fitted with her wish to have a life without
drunkenness, violence and abuse which she had endured for
three years during her relationship with Paul. Linda
explained that it had been very difficult to leave this
relationship because Paul had been trying to 'change to suit
my needs' and had been attending counselling. She said that
she felt bad about leaving knowing that Paul was now trying
to change, but that their life together had been 'a
nightmare'. Recently there had been a number of occasions
when Paul had become physically violent toward Linda, and
there was a history of verbal abuse, shouting and yelling.
Linda related that Paul did not think such actions against
her were wrong and she said: 'He justifies everything he
does. He convinces me it's my fault.'
The therapeutic conversations with Linda
took many directions. One of them involved asking a series
of questions about Linda's decision to leave the
relationship, what this decision meant to Linda, what small
steps had led up to it, and what values and commitments this
decision represented to Linda. Linda said that this decision
represented seeking 'a life of respect' for herself and her
children. This comment seemed to stand in contrast to
Linda's earlier descriptions of herself as a 'bad person',
so I was interested in hearing about the history that had
enabled Linda to believe she was a person worthy of respect.
I asked her about the history of respect in her life, if
there had been someone who had introduced her to the idea
that people are worthy of respect, if there had been someone
who had shown her respect, who respected her? Linda had to
think about this for a while, and finally said, 'I had a
friend some time ago. Imelda. We've drifted apart. She and I
went to school together. We helped each other out when
things got tough in each other's homes. I haven't seen her
for years. When I got involved with Paul my other
friendships seemed to fall away.'
We then continued to have a re-membering
conversation, in which I asked Linda a series of questions
about what she thought Imelda would say about the decisions
that she was now making to seek a 'life of respect'. Linda
said that she thought that if Imelda was present she would
hug her. 'She knows that children deserve respect'. I also
asked Linda if she had shown respect to Imelda when they
were friends. And Linda said that yes she had, that they had
respected each other. When I asked what this might have
meant to Imelda, Linda was visibly moved to consider that
her friendship might have been significant to another.
In asking what this conversation had
meant to Linda she said that it made it clearer why she was
leaving a relationship of violence, and that it spurred her
on to make other connections based on mutual respect. We
then discussed whether it would be possible to try to get in
touch with Imelda again, to ask her to come and join us in
the next session. While this proved a little challenging,
eventually Linda re-made contact with Imelda and Imelda took
up a role of outsider-witness in two further sessions. They
also began to share childcare arrangements and to rebuild
their friendship.
The use of re-membering conversations and
the engagement of outsider-witnesses in therapy offer many
opportunities for feminist-influenced practice. Perhaps the
most common use of outsider-witness practices and other
narrative practices in furthering a sense of community
amongst women is the groupwork that has occurred with women
who have been subject to child sexual abuse (see Mann &
Russell 2002; Silent Too Long 2000).
* Multi-storied identity
Narrative ideas are informed by
poststructuralist understandings of identity and
particularly the idea that our identities are multi-storied
(Thomas 2002). This opens up further options for feminist
inspired therapy with women and with men. In the following
example, Ginny Slattery describes how poststructuralist
ideas influence her work with young men who have sexually
offended:
Poststructuralist ideas have contributed
to widening the possibilities of how I work with young men
(aged between 12-18) who have sexually offended.
Poststructuralist ideas challenge the assumption that
internal structures or states determine people's actions and
behaviours. An example of how structuralist thought has
traditionally influenced working with young men who have
sexually offended, is in the way sexually abusive behaviour
has primarily been explained as resulting from 'patterns of
deviant arousal' located within the person, arising from a
dysfunction at the core of his/her self.
Poststructuralism challenges this
encapsulated view of self in a variety of ways and proposes
that identity is contextual and relational and that it is
not fixed. Behaviour therefore is not solely determined by
internal states. During my conversations with young men it
often becomes apparent that some of their sexually abusive
behaviour stems from attitudes and ways of thinking that are
located (and accepted) within the wider social culture.
Various patriarchal attitudes and ways of thinking have come
to constitute the dominant group of values shaping the
masculinity of these young men.
An example of some of these values or
ideas are the objectification of women in sexualised ways,
and the extraordinary sense of entitlement some young men
can have when it comes to exploring their sexual interests
or dealing with feelings of powerlessness. Obviously, these
ideas and values have implications for behaviour.
If I stay true to the notion of identity
being constructed rather than fixed, then I can step into
therapeutic questioning processes that enable young men to
explore their particular relationship with masculinity.
Inevitably, I discover many examples of times when young men
have acted in ways that are at variance to some of these
negative values and stereotypes, and these unique outcomes
may open the possibility for the generation of alternative
masculinities. I can then use the therapeutic process to
explore the commitments, hopes and dreams associated with
these alternative masculinities and seek to engage the young
men I work with in meaningful processes of
change.
The poststructuralist idea of identity
being something that is not fixed but dynamic and constantly
constructed is very helpful to me. So much so that I don't
think I could do this work with young men if I didn't
believe this. I hold this idea close to me at all times,
particularly when systems, people around me, and even the
young men themselves, can be trapped by essentialist
notions. Poststructuralist understandings of masculine
identity are particularly helpful to me as they broaden my
options for feminist action.
Understanding our identities as
multi-storied is also helpful to us in our work with women.
Women's lives (indeed all our lives) are complex. In working
with women who have acted in ways in which they regret, in
which they may have treated their children in ways that do
not fit with their preferred values, this notion of
multi-storied lives is a helpful one.
* Acknowledging the political nature of
therapeutic work and the powerful position of the
therapist
Rather than believe that we as therapists
are neutral in our work with clients, which holds the danger
of being influenced by 'hidden' assumptions or
'taken-for-granted' beliefs, as narrative practitioners we
seek to acknowledge both the political nature of therapeutic
work and the powerful position of the therapist in relation
to those seeking counselling. All therapy involves talking
about problems that have been created and exist within
relations of power and the politics of local culture.
Therefore all counselling is 'political'. Acknowledging this
brings a number of considerations to our role as narrative
practitioners.
Firstly, we are interested in
consistently asking questions of ourselves about the
assumptions or beliefs that inform our practice and we seek
to routinely hold these up to the light for critique or
analysis. All people are consistently influenced by the
effects of dominant gender relations (and also relations of
race, class, sexuality, culture, ability, etc). As
therapists, we believe we have a responsibility to become
more aware of how our experiences of gender relations (and
other relations of power) shape our own lives, and how in
turn these experiences influence our practice as therapists
(shaping what we see, what we look for, what we pay
particular attention to in the therapy room). Being
transparent in our work about our values and beliefs is a
further attempt to make it less likely that we will step
into expert positions in relation to other people's lives.
Importantly, narrative practice also
engages in various practices of accountability. Some of
these include seeking constant feedback from clients as to
the effects of therapeutic conversations on their lives;
only writing about clients in their company; and ensuring
that notes from therapy conversations remain the property of
the person whose life is under discussion (Mann 2000).
Developing practices and relationships of accountability
when working across cultures, across class relations, or in
any circumstances where the therapist's life is considerably
different from the life of those coming for consultation,
can be important (Tamasese & Waldegrave 1996; White
1995). These practices of accountability all stem from an
acknowledgement of the political nature of therapeutic work
and how neutrality is not possible in any interaction.
Within narrative practice the role of the
therapist involves deliberately not adopting an expert
position in relation to matters of other people's lives.
Taking a de-centred and yet influential position as a
therapist, and putting the person's knowledges and skills of
their life at the centre of the conversation, is a
commitment that acknowledges the powerful role of therapists
(Morgan 2002; White 1997). The therapist's role within
narrative practice moves away from matters of diagnosis,
prescription and intervention, and towards contributing to
the thick description of the skills and knowledges of those
who consult therapists.
There is a further commitment within the
therapeutic relationship to find ways, through
taking-it-back practices, to acknowledge the effect of the
conversations that we share with others on our own lives and
identities (White 1997).
While these practices do not guarantee
non-abusive therapeutic interactions, we believe that they
help to reduce the risks associated with the inherent power
imbalance of therapeutic relationships and thus they seem
congruent with feminist principles.
6. What are some of the feminist/gender
challenges occurring in the field?
As therapists, feminism offers us a
continual challenge in our work and in our broader lives. At
any one time we find ourselves grappling with a range of
dilemmas. These are not dilemmas we are seeking to resolve
&endash; in fact, many are not solvable. They do, however,
continually encourage us to question our practice and how
our assumptions and ways of working influence gender
relations.
In this section of the paper we have
tried to include a number of key broad challenges that we
believe are currently facing the field of therapy, all of
which are related in some way to issues of gender and
feminism.
i) Can therapy be congruent with broader
feminist principles?
Over years, some feminist thinkers have
explicitly challenged therapists, arguing that therapy is an
anti-feminist activity. Perhaps the most well-known of these
recent challenges appears in the book 'Changing our Minds'
by Celia Kitzinger and Rachel Perkins (1993). Kitzinger and
Perkins, writing specifically as lesbian feminists about the
application of therapy to lesbian lives, argue that therapy
is inherently a process of psychologising and
individualising women's experience when these are clearly
issues of political inequity. Therapeutic practices, they
believe, replicate the oppression of women by constructing
their distress as individual 'maladjustments' rather than as
a result of constantly attempting to adjust to society's
patriarchal expectations.
Kitzinger and Perkins' book is one we
would recommend to all feminist therapists as it challenges
us to develop ways of working with the stories of women's
lives that do not individualise what are broader social
relations, that do not psychologise experience, and that do
not reduce politics to healing.
ii) How can we acknowledge broader
relations of power in therapy without imposing our beliefs
as therapists?
If we are determined to acknowledge the
politics of experience in the therapy room, how do we avoid
imposing our political beliefs on those who consult us? If
it is our responsibility to bring the politics of experience
into the therapy room and to not leave individuals at the
mercy of broader discourses of sexism, racism, heterosexual
dominance, then how do we do so without getting on our 'soap
box'?
iii Is therapy the appropriate response
to the problems women are bringing to the therapy room?
Would forms of collective social action be more appropriate?
If so, why aren't we engaged in this broader action?
As discussed above, feminist action has
taken many forms over the years &endash; including taking to
the streets, establishing safe houses, protesting injustice,
etc. Engaging in collective forums for action is often
experienced as powerfully transformative of people's lives,
as well resulting in broader societal changes. Are we always
on the lookout for ways in which we can contribute to social
action &endash; ways of linking lives together for broader
purposes? Are there ways for us to take the issues being
talked about in the therapy room into other forums &endash;
groups, community work, broader action?
iv) Facing our professional privilege
Are we in jobs that could alternatively
be offered to representatives of the people for whom the
service is designed? Would the funding that pays our wages
be better spent in other ways? Are we dedicating enough of
our time to assisting those with little access to
professional knowledge to become more able to take up paid
positions in the future?
v) The transgender challenge
In recent years feminism has been
challenged by the experience, ideas and action of those
people who consider themselves 'gender activists', as Leslie
Feinberg explains:
We are a movement of masculine females
and feminine males, cross-dressers, transsexuals born on the
anatomical sweep between female and male, gender-benders,
many other sex and gender variant people, and our
significant others. All told we expand understanding of how
many ways there are to be a human being. (1998, p.5)
Transliberation activists have powerfully
questioned what it means to be a woman or a man, and to
disrupt all sorts of assumptions that have been prevalent
about gender identity and gender expression. This new
challenge is both confronting feminist principles and also
reinvigorating thinking about gender (Nestle, Howell &
Wilchins 2002; Pirelli Benestad 2002; Feinberg 1998; Nataf
1996). It is a challenge to which we hope feminist
therapists (ourselves included) will respond.
vi) The challenge of culture and race
Contemporary western feminism has come
under strong critique from women of colour, and women from
non-English speaking backgrounds for its inadequate
recognition of differences amongst women, and its inability
to discern and acknowledge its own cultural assumptions
(Moraga & Anzaldúa 1983, Lorde 1984; hooks 1989).
What's more, many black feminists have powerfully
illustrated that the subjugation they experience through
race and class relations is just as powerful, if not more
so, than the effects of sexism in their lives, and as such
they identify more strongly with other people from their
cultural community (women and men) than they identify with
white feminist women. These challenges have significant
implications for the development of counselling and
community work:
Are the services we work in truly
accessible to women of different cultures?
In what ways do cultural
assumptions influence our workplaces and the ways in which
we conduct counselling?
Are our responsibilities in this
area to try to create services that are accessible to people
of many cultures, or to support women of other cultures to
establish their own services and institutions (or both)?
If we are women of dominant
cultural groups, what are special responsibilities in
relation to addressing racism in the broader culture?
If we are women from marginalised
cultures, is the concept of feminism relevant to us? If so,
how and why?
To further explore these issues, we have
included here perspectives from Vanessa Jackson, an African
American feminist/therapist/community worker, and Shona
Russell, a white Australian feminist therapist.
Matters of culture, feminism and
therapy
by
Vanessa Jackson
I feel that one of the greatest failings
of feminism in America has been its failure to integrate
race and culture into the movement. As an African American
woman, it has been difficult at times to remain active in
the feminist movement due to failure of the movement to
address white supremacy within the movement and in the wider
society. I had the opportunity earlier this year to attend a
conference entitled 'The Colour of Violence' that explored
violence against women of colour. This was a rare
opportunity for me to have my feminist values and my reality
as a woman of colour in America validated. What was
especially powerful about the event was the collaboration
and validation across communities of colour. What stood out
for me was the incorporation of individual and community
storytelling throughout the conference.
As an African American
therapist/community worker,
I think that people of colour need to be
exploring ways of working therapeutically that build upon
our own cultural traditions. One of the reasons I am
interested in narrative practices is that they offer lots of
space to weave unique cultural values and tradition into the
work. I have been moved by the work of Indigenous Australian
women, Jane Lester and Barb Wingard (2001), as they have
blended indigenous healing traditions with narrative
practices to creating models of healing for their
communities. Their work inspired me to research the healing
traditions of Africans in America and to consider how I can
bring these ancient healing traditions into my clinical and
community work.
I have also been exploring, with several
African American colleagues, the concept of Testimonial
Therapy that blends narrative principles with the
long-established testimonial rituals of the Black church
(Jackson 2002; McAdams-Mahmoud 2002).
What it means to be a white
woman/feminist in Australia
by
Shona Russell
In recent years, due largely to the
challenge of Indigenous Australian women, many white
Australian feminists, myself included, have been undertaking
a personal and professional journey of acknowledging the
importance of race and culture in our lives and work. In
particular this has meant asking what it means to belong to
the majority white race, how we can come to terms with the
privilege this involves, and how we can use this privilege
in some way to seek to contribute to redressing the
histories of this country. Coming to terms with the meaning
of the privilege that accompanies whiteness in Australia, as
well as in my case middle-class privilege, requires an
engagement with history &endash; the history of colonisation
and dispossession of Indigenous Australians in this land.
This history also encompasses Government policies of
assimilation and the taking of children from Aboriginal
families. This history also involves the White Australia
Policy in which this country very deliberately sought to be
a 'white enclave' within Asia. It matters to me to consider
these histories because they continue to shape relationships
between white women, Aboriginal women and women from Asia.
Facing these histories poses various questions:
· What actions can I take in my life and
work as a therapist to recognise and respond to the
privilege with which I live?
· How can I acknowledge the work of
Indigenous feminists and feminists of colour and also engage
with the challenges that their perspectives make to broader
feminist understandings?
· When working with Indigenous
Australians and women from cultural backgrounds different
from my own, what actions can I take to safeguard against
replicating cultural dominance?
7. What are some of the day-to-day
gender-related dilemmas that we grapple with in our work as
therapists?
Quite apart from the broader challenges
occurring in the field, in our daily working lives as
therapists we are constantly facing smaller but still
significant gendered dilemmas &endash; either in our actual
therapy practice or in decisions we make in our workplaces.
Here we have included a sample of these daily dilemmas and
challenges identified by some of the therapists and
community workers we consulted who are seeking to practice
in feminist-inspired ways.
Gender in the therapy
room
I have been counselling now for many
years and it can still be a challenge when working with
heterosexual couples to ensure that the woman has an equal
chance to speak, to express her opinions, to convey her
understandings of life. I have been using the definitional
ceremony structures, interviewing one partner with the other
listening, and this helps considerably, but the dilemma
never goes away. When women and children are talking I am
still extra aware of keeping the man engaged in the
conversation. Of course, these are generalisations, but they
are still relevant to me. There is also the fact that many
more women attend counselling than men, and many more women
come to counselling on behalf of, or with their children. At
times this is just fine, and sometimes it is better that the
male figure is not present. But at other times it is very
important that we invite the man to take his share of
responsibility for the family relationships, whether this
means attending counselling or taking some other sort of
caring action. I don't see these sorts of dilemmas going
away any time soon! It's good to talk with others about them
and to share ideas as to how to respond to these matters of
gender in the therapy room.
Matters of authority
I think it is still difficult for many
people to hear and respond to women in authority in the
workplace. We are schooled to give the men's voices we hear
more authority. This happens in our day-to-day interactions,
in weekly meetings, in international events! Like many women
I struggle to find ways of using my authority differently
than how I have witnessed many men use theirs. Sometimes I
really resent it when it seems as if the only way to be
listened to is to engage in hierarchical authoritative ways
&endash; the very ways I wish to avoid. How to use our power
and influence in the workplace more collaboratively and
respectfully is, I believe, part of the feminist challenge.
Feminism is not just for
women
With feminism so often depicted as
'man-blaming', I find it difficult sometimes to convey that
the feminism that I subscribe to seeks to transform the
world in ways that will benefit both women and men. Whilst
patriarchy has terrible effects on the quality of women's
lives, it also restricts the quality of the day-to-day
relationships that men can have with women, and with each
other, and with children. I am particularly thinking of some
of the work that I do with male survivors of childhood
sexual abuse. Not only have these men often been abused by
other men, but dominant ideas about gender and homophobia
can make dealing with the abuse all the more difficult
(O'Leary 1999). Building partnerships with men to work on
issues of gender is part of the feminist challenge for me
(Hall 1996).
Transparency of
politics
- I work in a shelter for women
escaping from domestic violence situations. In our
advertisements for workers we have always indicated that we
are seeking women who have a commitment to feminist
principles. Recently it has been suggested that we stop
writing this in our job advertisements in order to have more
people apply. This seems fraught to me and is a current
dilemma we are struggling with.
- I work in a feminist-informed
women's health centre. We are very clear with each other
that this is a feminist service. But we do not advertise as
such, we do not have the word 'feminist' written on our
brochures or flyers that clients read in the waiting room.
This is a dilemma for me. On the one hand we are concerned
about discouraging women who do not have feminist principles
from coming to the centre. But on the other hand, shouldn't
we simply be transparent about the ethical position from
which we work?
Hostility to feminism
I work in a context in which some
members of staff are pretty hostile to feminism and I have
to deal with their remarks and diminishing comments. What's
more, whenever there is some broader backlash against
feminism in the press they pick up on this. The things is,
not only does this make work more difficult, it also makes
it really hard for me to find ways to talk meaningfully
about the complex issues &endash; like when some women do
use violence, or when some women do choose to stay in
violent relationships. If there is a sense of hostility to
feminism (and to women) it's really difficult to acknowledge
complexities of experience as everything gets construed as
antagonistic and taking sides. That's not what feminism is
about to me. It's not about saying all women's actions are
good and all men's actions are bad. I am interested in how
feminism can help us understand the complexities of
relationships. But if people are hostile to feminism,
sometimes it's really hard to even talk sensibly about the
complex things. I'd love to hear from other people who also
have to deal with this.
Sorrow
I work with women who have experienced
abuse and violence. This work means a lot to me and I really
value the conversations I share with the women. We don't
just talk about the violence, I get to hear about the steps
they are taking to reclaim their lives, I get to witness the
development of the alternative stories of their lives and
this can be inspiring. There are times however when I do
feel a considerable sorrow &endash; that people can be so
cruel, that such violence still exists and that it is so
common. I have needed to talk about this sense of sorrow and
to find things to do with it. Over time I have come to
respect and even treasure this sorrow. I know that I need to
keep aware of how this work affects me, how it brings both
joy and sadness.
Coming to terms with
history
Here in Australia, all of us in
so-called 'helping professions' are still trying to come to
terms with the implications of some of the histories of
these professions in this country, especially in relation to
the Stolen Generations in which Aboriginal children were
forcibly removed from their families (HREOC 1997). What is a
feminist response to these histories? How can we ensure that
such paternalism and racism no longer influence social work
practice?
Responding to women's violence
The feminist movement has achieved so
much in relation to making visible and responding to men's
violence. I still think we have work to do in relation to
finding ways to respond to violence perpetrated by women,
mostly to children, but also to other women and less often
to men.
I think we need to bring a feminist
analysis to this violence and ensure that we are ready and
willing to engage with this issue.
Ensuring that I am not pacifying
women
In my work as a therapist, how can I
ensure that I am not pacifying women? Women's anger can be a
vital force for broader social change. How can I ensure that
I am not promoting individual solutions when the anger and
the energy of the women consulting me could, with collective
engagement, be harnessed and directed towards creating
broader social change? How can I ensure in my work that I am
not offering only individual comfort but am linking women's
lives to other women's lives around shared purposes and
shared actions?
At the same time, if in my
conversations with women they do express anger, resistance
or outrage at certain experiences in their life, how can I
respond to this anger in ways that lead to preferred
outcomes for the women concerned? How can I keep in check
with those consulting me regarding their evaluation of the
sorts of conversations we are sharing?
Violence in particular
communities
In recent years, Indigenous Australian
women have been campaigning for support in addressing
violence against women and children in Indigenous
communities. What is our role as non-indigenous feminist
women in this area? How can we be supportive of the work of
Indigenous Australian women? What responsibilities do we
have to ensure the establishment of appropriate services,
and training for Indigenous people to work with their own
communities on these issues? Also, what responsibilities do
we have to make our own services accessible to people from a
range of different cultures?
Gendered personification of
problems
It's interesting how often in the
narrative practice of personifying the problem, that the
problem gets gendered as a male, from Mr Mischief to Tommy
Trouble. I wonder about the gendered assumptions that we may
be making in relation to the nature of problems and the
effect that this might have on people's relationships with
those problems. I am interested in finding ways of
personifying problems in ways that do not perpetuate
gendered stereotypes. But it is not easy!
Heterosexual dominance
In my work with young people, the
effects of heterosexual dominance still seem so strong and,
coupled with the effects of gender prescriptions, sometimes
I get overwhelmed at how rigid the beliefs are as to how a
young woman or young man is supposed to look, what they are
supposed to wear, how they are supposed to hold themselves.
It is a constant challenge for me to find the unique
outcomes, the times when young people are able to carve out
their own ideas about who they want to be, how they want to
live their lives.
Pathologising of young women's
rage
What strikes me as a core
feminist/gender challenge in the field at present is the way
in which the rage of young women and girls is often
pathologised. This feels like a very old and constant
struggle. What is new about it is the willingness within the
mental health field to medicate this 'problem' with powerful
anti-psychotic drugs. Of course, adolescent males (and
specifically any child of colour) are vulnerable to this
psychiatric abuse, but the sense that female rage is such an
aberration makes adolescent girls a particularly vulnerable
target. What is shocking is there is virtually no outcry
about this practice. Imagine engaging with these young women
about the rage in their lives, inquiring about how it came
into their lives, how it affects their relationship and
identity. Imagine trying to have conversations that might
harness what this rage stands for into constructive action.
This, to me, would be feminist practice.
Gay, Lesbian, Queer
experience
I work in a relationship counselling
service and recently I have come to realise how it is
overwhelmingly a heterosexual place. All the counsellors are
heterosexual as are virtually all those who come to consult
with us. We are now beginning to try to think through what
is our responsibility to gay, lesbian and queer people. How
should we be trying to make our service accessible to people
living in a broader range of relationships? (See Hewson
1993; Comment 1995; Eliason 1996; Laird 1999; Laird &
Green 1996.)
Questioning normal
There continue to be such strong norms
about what constitutes a 'normal' relationship, what is
'sex', and what makes up a sexual identity. And yet the
overwhelming majority of my clients also give evidence of
the way this 'model' fails to satisfy them or fit with their
own life experiences. While I have found some ways to work
with people to create more room for their own ways of
living, I have not found many forums for talking about how
we can go about questioning these norms in the broader
culture.
Women's sexuality
I work with women in relation to
sexuality and routinely hear from women who have been told
it is dirty and disgusting for them to masturbate, or who
are continuing to have sexual intercourse with their male
partner despite significant pain (for fear their partners
will otherwise leave them), or young women who have
experienced not only sexual assault but also ongoing
harassment at school because of the ways the story of the
assault have been told to others. In all of these
circumstances, a key aspect of my work involves creating
opportunities for women to reclaim a positive and empowered
sense of sex and sexuality. I would like to find ways in
which the therapy world and the world of sex-positive
education, literature and film could become more integrated
as I think these two worlds have a lot to offer each other
but are rarely in dialogue (see Nestle 2002).
Keeping on track
How do I keep my practice orientated
to feminist principles? I am working in a non-feminist
environment and I worry that I am losing my critical edge.
This is a constant dilemma for me. That's why I am
particularly excited about these questions and answers. I am
hoping to use these as a starting point for conversations in
my workplace. I will get everyone to read this and then
we'll call a meeting to discuss them. I'll let you know how
this goes!
We'd love to hear from you
Putting together this article has
consisted of many conversations, much email correspondence,
and considerable interest has been generated. It seems that
many people are interested in what feminism means now and
have appreciated the opportunity to reflect and write about
this. The women with whom we have spoken have all declared
that feminism is very relevant in their current work and
lives, and we would love to hear more about this. As
mentioned at the beginning of this article, we are now
starting up a regular column in this journal to discuss
'feminism, therapy and narrative ideas'. This column will be
asking the following four questions which we have adapted
from the writings of Estelle B. Freedman in her book No
Turning Back: The history of feminism and the future of
women (2002, p.12):
What differences does gender make
to our work? That is, how do women's experiences change our
understandings of families and relationships, and how do
women differ from each other?
Why did the feminist challenge to
therapy emerge historically, and how have these challenges
changed over time and place?
What do feminist therapists and
community workers want? That is, how do feminist
interpretations of inequality in families and relationships
lead to new ways of thinking about and practising therapy
and community work?
Where is feminist-informed therapy
going, and what strategies best advance thinking in relation
to feminist practice with individuals, families, groups and
communities?
We would be delighted if you wrote to us
about your reflections on any of these themes.
Please write to us here at Dulwich Centre
and your ideas will help contribute to ongoing discussions
and publications. Thanks!
Further Notes:
Acknowledging different
feminisms
What is feminism?
It seems everyone has their own
understanding or 'definition' of what feminism is and these
are certainly not all the same. In putting together this
paper, we found that there are so many different possible
answers to this question, that we wondered if this
'confusion of understandings' could make it difficult to
have some shared conversations across different experiences.
Here we wish to describe some of the many and sometimes
contradictory understandings and beliefs that exist about
what feminism is. We will track some of how feminism has
defined and re-defined itself, looking particularly at how
the different understandings might affect our practice as
therapists.
We are only going to look at some broad
themes and key issues here, and hope that the references
provided will satisfy people's desires to explore more. The
feminisms that we explore here relate to the 1960s onwards
(the so-called second wave of feminist action). While we do
not focus on the broader histories of women's action,
clearly the second wave of feminism built upon the work and
contributions of women who had come before.
The first three 'types' of feminism that
we explore here occurred during the '60s and '70s. It seems
to us that when someone is asked the question 'What is
feminism?' it is most likely that the reply will consist of
a mixture of 'liberal feminist', 'socialist feminist' and
'radical feminist' ideas.
Liberal feminism is based on the desire
for equal rights with men, particularly in public spheres of
life. Many people when asked 'What is feminism?' give an
answer along the lines of it being a political ideology
directed towards ensuring equality for women. It is about
challenging the power relations between men and women that
result in the systematic disadvantaging of women. Liberal
feminist-thinking is grounded in notions of individual
rights, freedom and autonomy, and an assumption of the basic
sameness of men and women. In the desire to attain a
rightful place for women in the public sphere, liberal
feminism states that if men and women are equally human then
women have as much right to do the things that men do, as
men have. Thus equality becomes a matter of access (as in
addressing the 'glass ceiling') and the processes to achieve
these changes are generally processes of reform.
Radical feminism on the other hand
rejects the idea that women and men are primarily the same,
rejects the idea of assimilation into a man's world, and
instead opts for the celebrating of women's difference.
Radical feminism is seen as a movement of women taking
action to create new possibilities and places for women in
society, to celebrate women's ways of being and what women
have to contribute. Within radical feminism there is a
particular valuing of women's difference that is not
possible within liberal feminism, and a focus on a sense of
shared 'sisterhood'. The emphasis is on the ways in which
women are oppressed as women, and this takes precedence over
their oppression as members of any other group. Though this
has certainly been challenged by more recent radical
feminists and feminists of colour, the belief was common
among white radical feminists of the 1960s and '70s that all
women, regardless of their race, culture, ethnicity, age or
class, had more in common with each other than they did with
any man. All men were seen as having more power than any
woman. With this as a basic tenet there was a push toward
separatism from men, and an honouring of lesbian
relationships. The valuing of women's experience and the
rejection of the public sphere as created for and by men,
led to a focus on the private sphere, particularly in the
areas of childbirth, sexuality and women's bodies, with a
determination for women to regain control over their own
bodies.
Socialist feminism/Marxist feminism was
the third key grouping of feminism that could be identified
in the 1960s and 1970s (although like liberal feminism it
has a long history). Within socialist and Marxist feminism,
the struggle against sexual oppression was seen as part of a
broader struggle to transform society and communities.
Issues of class, worker's rights, and the need to
dramatically alter the ways of living within western
societies, were placed on the agenda alongside the need to
address gender-based oppression.
Feminisms from Black/Indigenous/Women of
colour.
Some of the earliest challenges to the
universalising of women's experience within liberal and
radical feminisms came from women of colour within North
America, such as bell hooks, who were forthright in pointing
out the assumptions that white feminists had been making
about the universal category of women. Looking back, it is
now not difficult to see how both liberal and radical
feminisms of the 1960s and 1970s were steeped in a white
middle-class perspective. The idea of a 'sisterhood' with
bonds of common experience as women prevailing over other
categories of oppression, was powerfully challenged by women
who were marginalised by relations of race and class At the
same time, the individualised notions of 'having it all'
that some liberal white feminists aspired to were an affront
to those women who were either never going to have access to
middle-class lifestyles, or who were not interested in
replicating such ways of living. Black and Indigenous
feminists and women of colour have questioned many of the
assumptions of western feminism, created new ways of
understanding and transforming women's experiences within
particular cultures, and offered new ideas as to what is
involved in forming partnerships across cultures (See Moraga
& Anzaldúa 1983; Lorde; 1984; hooks 1989; Huggins
1998; Tamasese 2001).
Poststructuralist/postmodernist feminism.
During the 1980s and 1990s new ways of engaging with the
discourse of feminism became available. Poststructuralist
feminism brought a renewed emphasis on the plurality of
women's experience as opposed to the idea that women as a
group are 'unified' with an 'inherent sameness'. Reflecting
the broader poststructuralist position, there is scepticism
within poststructuralist feminism about the usefulness of
conceiving of 'women' as a single group. These feminists
challenge the established categories of sex, class,
race/ethnicity, and place an emphasis on the multiplicity of
meanings in regard to identity. Poststructuralist feminists
have stated that there are multiple and particular ways in
which all operations of power need to be de-stabilised in
each woman's life. Postmodern feminism is also interested in
unpacking and scrutinising the collection of ideas that have
gone into making up feminism so that taken-for-granted
notions are rendered visible and attended to, particularly
any ways in which universal norms of womanhood have been
established which have the effect of both marginalising and
reifying difference (see Hekman 1996; Weedon 1987;
Hare-Mustin & Maracek 1990).
French feminisms. A number of French
feminist writers (Irigary 1985; Kristeva 1984; Cixous 1994)
are located at an intersection between the liberal,
socialist and radical feminisms of the 1960s and '70s, and
the postmodernist/ poststructuralist feminisms that
developed through the 1980s and 1990s. These writers put
forward a challenge to the ways in which 'male experience'
is positioned as primary within psychoanalytical schools of
thought. They describe the ways in which female experience,
which does not fit the established norm, is rendered as
inferior. Deconstruction then becomes a tool with which to
see how this process of devaluing works and how implicit
assumptions of 'normality' have particular power. The French
feminists, although using many of the tools of
poststructuralism, still remain invested in psychoanalysis,
with the belief that the unconscious is produced by some
underlying universal structure.
Queer feminism. The thinking of
poststructuralist feminists such as Judith Butler (1989)
have also been influential in the development of queer
theory and associated queer feminism. Queer theory is
interested to destabilising all fixed categories of identity
including notions of female/male, or
homosexual/heterosexual. Selves (identities) are seen as
socially constructed through the exigencies of power and,
because the operations of power are multiple, then the
constitution of self is seen as something that is fluid.
Perhaps the most visible queer activists are those
transgender and intersex people who are challenging
pre-conceived motions of male and female, and bisexual
writers who are questioning the dichotomy of
heterosexual/homosexual identity (see Nestle, Howell, &
Wilchins 2002; Gibian 1999).
Here we have included very brief and thin
descriptions of these different types or themes of feminism.
There are many others that we have not mentioned here,
including feminisms that have their history long before the
second wave of action in the 1960s and 1970s. We strongly
recommend that readers refer to the books below and to those
in the references for more detailed responses to the
question, 'What is feminism?'
Two recommended books
Chris Beasley's (1999) pocket-book guide
to feminism: What is Feminism Anyway? Understanding
contemporary feminism. Sydney: Allen & Unwin.
Chris has been a lecturer in Women's
studies here in Adelaide for the last decade or so and has
contributed this wonderfully accessible, clear and concise
'guide' to feminism which we thoroughly recommend.
Estelle Freedman's (2002): No Turning
Back: The history of feminism and the future of women.
London: Profile Books. See website:
www.noturningback.stanford.edu
This thorough and inspiring book, written
by an historian and teacher of Women's Studies at Stanford
University, describes the rich histories of different
feminisms in different parts of the world.
About this paper
This paper was created through
collaborative processes. We sent off a list of questions to
a range of narrative practitioners in Australia, the USA,
Mexico and the UK. When people's responses came in, we
compiled these and edited them and then sent them back to
ensure that everyone was happy with the final result. Please
note that the examples of practice used in this paper are
composites, some details have been changed to preserve
identity, and some literary license has been applied. They
are, however, all realistic examples of work and based on
real-life examples.
We would like to acknowledge all those
who sent us the responses from which this piece has been
created:
Catherine Butler, Cheryl White, Kaethe
Weingarten, Jane Speedy, Mercedes Martinez, Vanessa Jackson,
Carol Halliwell, Zoy Kazan, Leonie Simmons, Lisa Berndt,
Joanne McNamara, Claire Ralfs, Tamsin Baker, Jussey Verco
and Manja Visschedijk. We'd also like to acknowledge the
team at Dulwich Centre Publications, Cheryl White who
initially suggested this topic and has been involved
throughout its creation, David Denborough's editing and
writing skills, and Jane Hales' typeset and liaison.
We would also like to acknowledge those
women with whom we have worked in therapy whose ideas,
perspectives and challenges are represented in this paper.
Notes
1. Shona and Maggie can be contacted c/o
Dulwich Centre Publications.
2. Please note that when this paper
refers to the development of narrative therapy it is
referring to the forms of narrative practice developed in
Australia and New Zealand in the mid-late 1980s. It is not
referring to other therapies engaging with the narrative
metaphor in the USA or Scandinavia.
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Further feminist reading
Bulkin, E., Pratt, M.B. & Smith, B.
1984: Yours in Struggle: Three feminist perspectives on
anti-semitism and racism. New York: Firebrand
Books.
Crenshaw, K. 1997: 'Intersectionality and
identity politics: learning from violence against women of
color.' In Lyndon Shanley, M. & Narayan U. (eds):
Reconstructing Political Theory: Feminist perspectives.
University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University
Press.
Dé Ishtar, Z. 1994: Daughters of
the Pacific. Melbourne: Spinifex.
Findlen, B. (ed) 1995: Listen Up: Voices
from the next feminist generation. Seattle: Seal
Press.
Hekman, S. 1996: Feminist Interpretations
of Michel Foucault. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State
University Press.
Jackson, S. & Scott, S. 1996:
Feminism and Sexuality: A reader. Edinburgh: Edinburgh
University Press.
Sabbagh, S. (ed) 1996: Arab Women:
Between defiance and restraint. New York: Olive Branch
Press.
White, E. (ed) 1994: The Black Women's
Health Book: Speaking for ourselves. Seattle: Seal
Press.
Wilkinson, S & Kitzinger , C. 1993:
Heterosexuality: A feminism and psychology reader. London:
Sage.
Further reading about
masculinity
Denneny, M., Ortleb, C. Steele, T. 1984:
The View from Christopher Street: Journalism from America's
leading gay magazine. London: Chattoe &
Windus.
McLean, C., Carey, M. & White, C.
1996: Men's Ways of Being. Boulder, Colorado: Westview
Press.
Stoltenberg, J. 1989: Refusing To Be a
Man: Essays on sex and justice. New York:
Meridian.
Websites
Collections of classic feminist
writings:
http://www.cwluherstory.com/CWLUArchive/classic.html
http://scriptorium.lib.duke.edu/wlm/
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