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Different Homes for Group Analysis. Experiences from the Scottish Highlands Chris MacGregor . Fathers, Authority and the Land. Highland landscape Remote and rural communities Remnants of clan history 21 st Century legacies. Autonomy and Authority. Isolation / participation
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Different Homes for Group Analysis Experiences from the Scottish Highlands Chris MacGregor
Fathers, Authority and the Land • Highland landscape • Remote and rural communities • Remnants of clan history • 21st Century legacies
Autonomy and Authority • Isolation / participation • Loneliness / sense of connection • Helplessness / personal agency • Sense of identity and ancestry • Good enough fathers
Scottish Government • Mental health strategy • Confidence and selfesteem? • Effects of isolation/living in small communities
Fatherlands, Motherlands Nationality Ethnicity Cultural status, language/ ‘mother tongue’ Faith, religion Sense of identity and ‘rootedness’ or belonging Confidence in self and community/country Complex and troubling?
The status of the father in group analysis • Locus of authority……but restrictive • Orthodox Foulkes : Freud’s primal horde, origins of Oedipal complex • Eliasian Foulkes : Civilising process, interdependence, ideology • Father as patriarchal ruler, law-maker
The group conductor and authority • Role of conductor – Foulkes avoided authoritarian leadership • Conductor may ‘dig his own grave’ in relation to authority as group matures? • Challenge of working with maternal matrix • Impact of conductor’s own gender
Nitsun(2009): Authority and Revolt • Criticises ‘formulaic’ view of conductor’s transfer of authority • Challenges the benign view of authority • The antigroup- creative potential • Conductor’s own authority issues • Highlights lack of recognition of the masculine elements of group and conductor
Nitsun • “Idealisation of our leaders often hides a story of conflict and paradox” • “We have to embrace the monstrous in our leaders and ourselves”
Response to Nitsun • Hutchinson (2009): conductor is dynamic administrator (law-giver) and also offers interpretation (authority-giver) • the style and gender of the conductor shape the way the group behaves
Response to Nitsun and Hutchinson • Glyn (2010): authority in the family implies some form of legitimacy, entailing a process of triangulation -‘this is how it is done’ • External sources of regulation • Glyn holds that authority does not belong to the conductor, so cannot be given away
Gender,Authority and the Conductor • What to do when the bus times change..
Conductor gender and authority • Elliott (1986): is group analytic psychotherapy itself gendered? • Conlon(1991): can dynamic administration pose a dilemma for female conductors? • Burman (2002): cautions to beware of implicit as well as explicit features of gendering of power and authority in groups • advises to locate gender and sexuality in relation to changing social structures
Conductor gender and authority • Moss(2004) cautions against conductor ‘blindness’ to gender issues • Maguire(1995) refers to conductors ability to draw freely on cross-gender identifications – which will enable patients to integrate maternal and paternal strengths within the transference
The group and gender • James(1984) compares Winnicott’s ‘holding’ with Bion’s ‘container’ – in the group setting enables the group’s capacity to think and understand • The maternal matrix, womblike – but the mother requires support • Need for rehabilitation of father in GA
Parental Dyad and Authority • Lacan’s(1955) nom du pere, centrifugal father • Foulkes(1948): • “The family group and its influence is precipitated in the innermost core of the human mind, incorporated into the child’s growing ego and superego, forming their very nucleus”
The Patrix:‘a mould or dye for casting, the reversal of matrix’
Clinical Implications of the Patrix • The group room • The group’s viability • The fence around the play area • The fatherly ‘lap’ where the infant tests his legs • Authority as necessary boundary, working operational , in ‘consummate reciprocity’ • Protective and potent
Patrix in Highland groups • Connection with social history and changing roles in contemporary communities • New and inventive ways of surviving and raising families • Stress management without inebriation • Groups can be safe enough
Seeing the greater whole • Figure/ ground includes social unconscious and social memory • Dynamic nature of Authority/Autonomy • Klein(1952): infant’s capacity to enjoy relation to both parents at the same time – ‘precondition for the infant’s hope that he can bring them together and unite them in a happy way’ • Patrix and Matrix are part of natural order of balanced psychic world -link to symmetrical thinking ?
Patrix as mind of the conductor • Regulating , shaping and forming • Represents conductor’s belief’s and position with reference to authority : flexible/liberal, firm/unyielding or ill-formed/changing etc • Leaders and monsters are created in our own image
References • All references are available with handout