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Department of Psychosocial Studies

Dr Irene Bruna Seu, MA, PhD (Lond)

Lecturer

b.seu@bbk.ac.uk

(020 7631) 6539 (tel)
020 7631 6312 (fax)

Room 655
Birkbeck College
Malet Street
London
WC1E 7HX

 

Research

My main research interests, grouped under the four broadly defined areas listed below, reflect my multidisciplinary background and expertise (Honours degree in Philosophy, MA and PhD in Psychology, UKCP Registered Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist), my intellectual interest in Western culture and values, and political commitment to feminism and the attainment of a just society. These concerns fuel my overall interest in epistemological debates around the ontological and epistemological status of knowledge in social sciences in contemporary western society and how these debates are affected by post-structuralism, psychoanalysis and feminism. Connected to these is my commitment to developing and applying qualitative research methods, in particular Grounded Theory and Discourse Analysis, to the investigation of social phenomena.

  1. Human Rights, social responsibility and helping behaviour. For some years I have researched public responses to mediated news of Human Rights abuses, both in the UK and Spain, thanks to the support of a  Leverhulme Foundation Fellowship and Birkbeck College Research grants. With time, these have evolved into an interest in the related issues of moral and social responsibility; prosocial behaviour; moral boundaries and discursive constructions of the ‘Other’. I have used a psychosocial approach in bringing together psychological work on altruism, psycho-social understanding of denial as well as psychodynamic and discursive readings of emotional responses. I have published on these subjects in Psychological and Human Rights journals 
  2. Gender. I am particularly interested in exploring how current social constructions of femininity and gender affect women’s lives.  In particular I have conducted in-depth feminist qualitative research into women's experience of shame and critically explored socio-psychological and psychoanalytic theories of femininity, mainly through a social constructionist/discursive approach.
  3. Psychoanalysis. My interest in psychoanalysis is two-fold. I am concerned with psychoanalysis both as a body of theory that has greatly affected the way we understand human behaviour and motivation, and as a clinical technique. As far as the latter is concerned, in my writing I have investigated the complex relation between feminism and psychoanalysis particularly in clinical practice. I am also interested in applying psychoanalytic ideas to the understanding of social phenomena, in particular oppression, discrimination and bystander behaviour. My critical interest in psychoanalytic theory and practice on the one hand and gender issues on the other has been further developed in ‘Feminism and Psychotherapy; Reflections on Contemporary Theories and Practices’ (Sage, 1998), co-edited with C. Heenan and in the edited book "Who am I? The ego and the self in psychoanalysis" (Rebus Press/Taylor and Francis 2000).
  4. The substantive interests listed above have found best methodological expression in discursive analyses and psychoanalytic readings of text. I am currently working on the complementarities and potential benefits of bringing together these epistemologically different readings of text, in grappling with the complexities of subjectivity and power dynamics.

 

Current PhD & Doctoral Students

Martine Castagna-Shoo: “Helping adolescents; a discursive analysis of young adults’ talk of prosocial behaviour”

Michael Mallaghan: “Negotiating gay Chinese subjectivities – shame, dilemmas and conflicts”

Andrew Middlecoat: “How are the existing biological relationships with families affected by fostering?”

Graham Lee: “Living with ADHD diagnosis: A disordering of family life”

 

Recently Completed PhDs

Lynn Moore: “Families’ talk about their first session of family therapy; a discursive analysis”

Janette Bennett: “(Dis)ordering Motherhood: Mothering a child with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)”

Marcus Averback: "Fatherhoods in Family Therapy; A Discourse Analysis of Family Therapists’ Contributions to the Constructions of Fatherhoods."

 

Recent Publications

Books

Seu I.B. (ed.) (2000) “Who am I? The Self and Ego in Psychoanalysis” Vol.V in the series 'Encyclopedia of Psychoanalysis'. London: Rebus Press/ Karnac.

Seu, I.B. and Heenan, C. (eds.) (1998) Feminism and Psychotherapy; Reflections on contemporary theories and practices.Vol.3 in the series: ‘Perspectives on Psychotherapy’  London: Sage.

 

Book Chapters

Seu, I.B. (2008 – in press) Shameful silences: self-protective secrets and methodological omissions. In: R. Ryan-Flood  and R. Gill (eds.) Secrets and Silence in the Research Process: Feminist Reflections.  London: Routledge

Seu I.B. (2005).Feminist Psychotherapy. In C. Feltham, & I. Horton (Eds.),  Handbook of Psychotherapy and Counselling.(2nd ed.) London: Sage

Cohen, S., & Seu, I.B. (2002). Knowing enough not to feel much: emotional thinking about human rights appeals. In  M. Bradley & P. Pedro (Eds.), Truth claims: Representation and Human Rights. Rutgers University Press.

Seu I.B. (2000). Feminist Psychotherapy. In C. Feltham,  & I. Horton (Eds.), Handbook of Psychotherapy and Counselling. London: Sage

 

Journal Articles

Seu. I.B. (in press) “Everybody is welcome but nobody is living next to me”; talking of emotions and with emotions about refugees. Special issue on ‘Asylum and Refugees’ Annual Review of Critical Psychology.

Seu, I.B. (in press). Bystanders to  Human Rights appeals: A critical reappraisal of the ‘Passive Bystander’ phenomenon. Human Relations.

Seu, I.B. (under review) Bystanders to  Human Rights appeals: a critical reappraisal of the ‘Passive Bystander’ phenomenon. Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology

Seu, I.B. (2006). Shameful selves: Women’s feelings of inadequacy and constructed facades. European Journal of Psychotherapy and Counselling, 8(3).

Seu, I.B. (2007) Psychology’s contribution to bystander non-intervention.  Social Practice/Psychological Theorising Article 6; retrieved 04/01/07 from http://sppt-gulerce.boun.edu.tr.html

Seu, I.B. (2003). The woman with the baby: Exploring narratives of female refugees. Exile and Asylum Feminist Review, 74. London: Pelgrave.

Seu, I.B. ( 2003). Your stomach makes you feel that you don’t want to know anything about it : Desensitization, defence mechanisms and rhetoric in response to and Human Rights abuses. Journal of Human Rights, 2(2), 183-196.

Seu I.B. (2003) .Desensitisation and Human Rights abuses:  Defence mechanisms and rhetoric in talk about inaction. Human Frailty. Journal of Human Rights, 2(2).

Seu I.B. (2000). Feminist psychoanalytic psychotherapy: Some reflections on a complex undertaking. Changes, 18(4).

Images © 2008 Lucy Orta, Professor Art, Fashion and the Environment, University of the Arts London (Photo: JJ Crance)


Department of Psychosocial Studies, School of Social Science, History and Philosophy, Birkbeck, University of London, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HX
tel: 020 3073 8045 / fax: 020 3073 8046 / email: psychosocial-studies@bbk.ac.uk