University of California, Los Angeles.
Transcult Psychiatry. 2013 Oct;50(5):726-43. doi: 10.1177/1363461513488077. Epub 2013 Jun 20.
This article examines how middle-class psychotherapy clients in Southern California use work as a coping strategy in the aftermath of distressing life events. It begins by arguing why all such distress in the aftermath of unbidden and unanticipated events are "local" distresses, embedded in particular social and interpersonal contexts, and then discusses the various ways in which people may use cultural resources, including ordinary, mundane, everyday routines and practices, such as work, to express and cope with emotional distress. Three case studies are used to illustrate how work can be used to avoid emotional distress, to conceal it, and also to acknowledge and heal it.
本文探讨了南加州中产阶级心理治疗客户如何在痛苦生活事件发生后将工作作为一种应对策略。它首先论证了为什么所有这些在意外和意料之外的事件发生后的痛苦都是“局部”的痛苦,嵌入在特定的社会和人际关系背景中,然后讨论了人们可能使用文化资源的各种方式,包括平凡、平凡、日常的日常生活和实践,如工作,来表达和应对情绪困扰。通过三个案例研究来说明工作如何被用来避免、隐藏和承认和治愈情绪困扰。