The Invisibility of Power: A Cultural Ecology of Development in the Contemporary United States

Author:

Mandviwala Tasneem M.1,Hall Jennifer2,Beale Spencer Margaret1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Comparative Human Development, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA;

2. Social Intervention Group, School of Social Work, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA

Abstract

This article highlights the invisible power those in racial and gendered privilege continue to hold in the contemporary United States and the harmful psychological effects of this power on both those it oppresses and, importantly, those who wield it. A lack of empathy and an inability for compassion arise in individuals holding sociopolitical and cultural power, and we highlight how this psychological condition is qualifiable as psychosis and question why it has not been discussed as such in the literature until now. We also, however, bring attention to the invisible psychological power that marginalized populations in the United States hold, invisible because it has been left largely unrecognized by mainstream cultural forces. By centering the ways American cultural minorities successfully navigate multiply oppressive structural systems, we conclude with a reflection on how intersectional feminism can offer a philosophical lens through which to mitigate the unhealthy developmental outcomes and effects of White heteronormative male power.

Publisher

Annual Reviews

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology,General Medicine

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