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APA Psychotherapy Training Videos are intended solely for educational purposes for mental health professionals. Viewers are expected to treat confidential material found herein according to strict professional guidelines. Unauthorized viewing is prohibited.
Feminist therapy is a technically eclectic approach to treatment conceptually based on feminist political analyses and feminist scholarship on the psychology of women and gender. Although on the surface, the work of a feminist therapist may appear to differ little from that of other therapists, the ways in which a feminist therapist understands and gives meaning to the client's life history and to what transpires in the therapeutic relationship can be very different indeed. It is this difference in meaning and concept that makes feminist therapy unique in its perspectives and valuable for both female and male clients. Feminist therapists are centrally, although not solely, interested in the ways in which gender and gendered experiences inform people's understandings of their lives and the development of the distress that serves as a catalyst for seeking therapy. We are also interested in other factors, such as race, class, sexual orientation, age cohort, and ability, which interact with gender in the social matrix of power and dominance, and we base theory on multicultural data and paradigms. Feminist therapy attends to the ways in which people have lost their power to know and name themselves and their experiences, and the ways in which social, cultural, and political processes interact with human development. It perceives therapy as a political action, in that it has meaning in the large social and political milieu. Feminist therapy attempts to create an egalitarian therapy relationship in which, although the inequality of power between therapist and client is acknowledged, intentional efforts are made by the therapist to empower the client and to define her or him as an authority equal in value to the therapist. Clients are encouraged to discover the manner in which their authority in their lives has been taken from them and, using the therapeutic relationship as one model setting, begin to reclaim that authority and to speak in their own voice. |