1st Edition

Feminist Liberation Practice with Latinx Women

    This book unearths ancestral wisdom to address the needs of oppressed women in both the Global South and Global North. Focusing on Latinx womxn, it empowers through decoloniality, liberation, mujerismo, and nepantlismo. As such, Latinx womxn compose their testimonios, engage in critical consciousness, and commit to global liberation. Mujerismo--a dissident daughter of liberation theology--is a Latinx womanism with anti-patriarchal, anticolonial, anti-neocolonial, and antiracial-gendered colonial orientations. Mujeristas appropriate cultural/religious/spiritual symbols to construct empowering new meanings for decolonization and liberation. Feminist liberation practices assist in this process. When Latinx womxn’s immigration accentuates inhabiting the cultural borderlands, they enter Nepantla--a place in between—to reclaim themselves and to heal soul wounds and trauma.  Rooted in the Nahuatl concept of collective transformation, Nepantla encourages the development of psychospiritual abilities.  As Latinx womxn engage in nepantlismo, they awaken their spiritual faculties to become instruments of courage, resistance, revolution, love, and hope. 

    This book will be valuable to researchers, therapists, and educators interested in the practice of feminist therapy. The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Women & Therapy.

    Introduction: Feminist Liberation Practice with Latinx Women

    Carrie L. Castañeda-Sound and Lillian Comas-Díaz

     

    1. A Mujerista Liberation Psychology Perspective on Testimonio to Cultivate Decolonial Healing

    Jesica Siham Fernández

     

    2. Nepantla Moments in Therapy: A Clinical Example With Latinx Immigrants

    Pilar Hernandez-Wolfe

     

    3. Mujerista Psychology: A Case Study Centering Latinx Empowerment in Psychotherapy

    Marlene L. Cabrera and Carrie L. Castañeda-Sound

     

    4. Anti-Colonial Futures: Indigenous Latinx Women Healing from the Wounds of Racial-Gendered Colonialism

    Nayeli Y. Chavez-Dueñas, Hector Y. Adames and Jessica G. Perez-Chavez

     

    5. Abolitionist Feminism, Liberation Psychology, and Latinx Migrant Womxn

    Daniela Domínguez

     

    6. The Connectivity Bridge – A Clinical Understanding: Postcolonial Therapy with Latinx Women Living in the United States

    Carmen Inoa Vazquez

     

    7. Why Am I A Woman? Or, Am I? Decolonizing White Feminism and the Latinx Woman Therapist in Academia

    marcela polanco

     

    Conclusion—Latinx Feminist Liberation Practices: Integration and R/Evolution

    Lillian Comas-Díaz and Carrie Castañeda-Sound

    Biography

    Lillian Comas-Díaz works on multiculturalism, feminism, liberation, and spirituality. A private practitioner and a Clinical Professor at George Washington University's Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, she was a faculty member at Yale University Psychiatry Department, where she directed its Hispanic Clinic. Additionally, she directed the American Psychological Association Office of Ethnic Minority Affairs. The author/coeditor of 13 books, and 170 scholarly articles; Lillian received multiple awards, including the 2019 American Foundation and APA Association Gold Medal Lifetime for the Practice in Psychology.

    Carrie Castañeda-Sound is the Director of the Master of Arts in Clinical Psychology with an Emphasis in Marriage and Family Therapy: Evening Format program at Pepperdine University, and a licensed psychologist in California. Her teaching and research interests include Latinx, Liberation, and Mujerista Psychologies. She directs the Language, Culture, and Gender Lab, which involves students in research in the broad areas of language, culture, and gender within the field of psychology and specifically psychotherapy.