Title
Asian American identities, relationships, and post-migration legacies : reflections from marriage and family therapists / edited by Jessica ChenFeng and Lana Kim.
ISBN
1003321593
1040125816
1040125840
9781003321590
9781040125816
9781040125847
1032343389
1032343397
9781032343389
9781032343396
Publication
New York, NY : Routledge, 2025.
Copyright Notice Date
©2025
Physical Description
1 online resource (x, 205 pages)
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Notes
Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on October 09, 2024).
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Biographical / Historical Note
Jessica ChenFeng, PhD, LMFT (she/her), daughter of immigrants from Taiwan, is a systemic therapist, consulting with academic, healthcare and church organizations to improve the well-being of people within their communities. Her work centers around social contextual intersections of race, gender, generation, trauma, and spirituality. She is an associate professor of marriage and family therapy at Fuller Theological Seminary. Lana Kim, PhD, LMFT (she/her), daughter of immigrants from South Korea, is a systemic therapist, supervisor, and educator with a background in medical family therapy. Her clinical and research focus includes contextual issues in teaching and supervision, relational parenting, sociocultural and socio-emotional attunement in couple therapy, and collaborative care practices. She is an associate professor and the program director for the Marriage, Couple, and Family Therapy program at Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Oregon.
Summary
Bringing together the personal and professional narratives of Asian American family therapists, this book offers insight into the Asian American experience through systemic theory and frameworks, individual and community stories, and clinical considerations. The Asian American experience is still a largely invisible and unknown one, especially in the field of marriage and family therapy. With a contextual lens, this book highlights how understanding family migration legacies and individual generational status relative to time, place, and context is critical to doing meaningful work with Asian Americans. Filled with thought-provoking case studies and reflective questions, chapters discuss the impact of stereotyping on mental health; the historical and present ways that Asian American racialization invisibilizes individual and collective experiences; shame associated with bicultural identity, gender, generational trauma, media representations; and more. Each chapter bridges these ideas to clinical practice while concurrently centering the voices and experiences of Asian American therapists. This book is essential reading for marriage and family therapists and other mental health clinicians who want to deepen their understanding of, relationship with, and clinical support for the Asian Americans in their lives, whether friends, colleagues, supervisees, or clients.
Variant and related titles
Taylor & Francis. EBA 2024-2025.
Other formats
Print version:
Added to Catalog
October 09, 2024
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.