1st Edition

Intimate Relationships in China in the Light of Depth Psychology A Study of Gender and Integrity

By Huan Wang Copyright 2020
    226 Pages
    by Routledge

    226 Pages
    by Routledge

    In Intimate Relationships in China in the Light of Depth Psychology: A Study of Gender and Integrity, Huan Wang presents an overview of Jungian ideas as they apply to gender roles and relationships in contemporary Chinese culture. Moving beyond a Western interpretation of key concepts, Wang attempts to understand and deal with the difficulties of contemporary marriages in a rapidly changing society, investigating how young Chinese couples have been affected by traditional values, Westernisation, and the one-child policy. Wang also discusses how depth psychology has developed and been applied in China, highlighting how it differs in Chinese and Western settings and the problems and achievements Chinese people have faced. She concludes that the Chinese psyche today is experiencing a transition from the compliance of collectivism to the awareness of individuation, and that the rediscovery of the notion of integrity will help Chinese therapists to find their way, make young Chinese people independent individuals, and bring a new approach to their marriages.

    This is the first time such issues have been profoundly and comprehensively discussed in a Chinese context. It will be an invaluable resource for analytical psychologists, psychotherapists, and marriage and family and couple therapists working in China or with Chinese clients. It will also be of great interest to academics and students of Jungian and post-Jungian studies and to anyone interested in the psyche of contemporary China.

    Chapter 1: Introduction;  Chapter 2: The Notions of Femininity and Maculinity and Men and Women in China;  Chapter 3: The History of Developing Psychoanalysis and Analytical Psychology in China;  Chapter 4: The Applicability of Analytical Psychology in China: How a Western Psychological Lens Might Be Adapted in the East;  Chapter 5: Experiences, Disappointments and Expectations: Interviews with Young Urban Chinese Couples;  Chapter 6: The Peony Pavilion as a Picture of Sexual Individuation;  Chapter 7: Unresolved Oedipal Conflicts and Narcissim-Typical Difficulties for Marriage and Individuation for Young Chinese Today: Two Clinical Case Studies;  Chapter 8: Some Concluding Reflections: Marriage as a Psychological Relationship in China;  References; Index

    Biography

    Huan Wang, Ph.D., is a researcher and graduate of the Department of Psychosocial and Psychoanalytic Studies at the University of Essex, UK.

    ‘A fascinating and important analysis of intimate relationships in China today. Wang is not only a scholar, but also a psychotherapist with a practice in China. This combination makes for a very unusual stand-out book. In addition, her critique and adaption of Jungian ideas in the Chinse context is also of the greatest importance, given the need to limit the kneejerk, colonial application of Eurocentric ideas in non-Western locations. We clearly learn about love and marriage in China. But then this new knowledge serves as a challenging mirror – even a form of therapy – for our own struggles with intimacy in today’s troubled times for the West.’ – Andrew Samuels, former professor of Analytical Psychology, University of Essex, UK

    ‘This book will attract readers who are interested in learning about psychological problems and social issues related to the Chinese marriage and family structure. I am sure it will be very interesting and will attract all readers, both Chinese and Westerners, men and women. I endorse this book highly.’ – Shirley Ma, Ph.D, Jungian analyst, and author of Footbinding: A Jungian Engagement with Chinese Culture and Psychology

    Huan Wang’s comprehensive and brilliant exploration of how the current revolution in Chinese concepts of masculinity and femininity affects Chinese young people and their marriages is both original and deeply edifying. China underwent unprecedented social engineering both of the shape of the family and of its cultural value systems that form the foundation for intimate relationships. Wang’s description of these factors affecting 1/5 of humanity is essential reading for all those who wish to understand the global evolution of modern marriage and the future of Chinese culture.’ – David E. Scharff, MD, Chair, International Psychoanalytic Association Committee on Couple and Family Psychoanalysis; Chair, Continuous Training Program in Psychoanalytic Couple and Family Therapy, Beijing; Editor, the journal Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy in China

    ‘In this remarkable, ground-breaking book the reader is offered an extraordinary opportunity to see into the complexity of gender issues in China through the eyes of a bicultural clinician-scholar. Huan Wang provides a current, up to date look at the psychological struggles of contemporary Chinese people in their intimate lives as gender roles and identities undergo powerful transformations. She expertly guides us into a deep understanding of the cultural and archetypal background activated by these processes. Time will surely prove this an essential read for anyone interested in cross-cultural studies.’ – Joe Cambray, Ph.D. is President/CEO and Provost at Pacifica Graduate Institute, USA; he is Past-President of the International Association for Analytical Psychology; has served as the U.S. Editor for The Journal of Analytical Psychology and is on various editorial boards. He was a faculty member at Harvard Medical School in the Department of Psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital, Center for Psychoanalytic Studies.