Exploring Racialized Clients’ Experiences of Oppression During Counselling With White Therapists
Abstract
Research focusing on ethnicity and race in cross-cultural counselling has pointed to concerns of oppression within counselling processes; however, an open exploration of oppression that may occur in session is not readily available from the client perspective. With the aim of deepening understanding of oppression and power in cross-cultural counselling, this study used a hermeneutic phenomenological approach to explore the lived experiences of oppression of five racialized clients who engaged in counselling with white therapists. Analysis of transcribed interviews resulted in three themes related to oppression in therapy: whiteness of therapy, therapist cultural positioning, and therapist approach to therapy. Findings support emerging theoretical understandings of in-session cultural oppression, nuance existing descriptions of microaggressions, and inform practical considerations for counsellors and educators, in the hope of preventing occurrences of oppression with racialized clients and disrupting dominant white expert discourses that may subvert the lived realities of racialized clients.