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Anton Boisen: Madness, Mysticism, and the Origins of Clinical Pastoral Education

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Anton Boisen: Madness, Mysticism, and the Origins of Clinical Pastoral Education

Contributors:

By (Author) Sean J. LaBat

ISBN:

9781978711556

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Lexington Books/Fortress Academic

Publication Date:

4th February 2021

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Other Subjects:

Christianity
Religious social and pastoral thought and activity
Religious ethics

Dewey:

253.52092

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

190

Dimensions:

Width 164mm, Height 229mm, Spine 20mm

Weight:

454g

Description

In Anton Boisen: Madness, Mysticism, and the Origins of Clinical Pastoral Education, Sean J. LaBat provides a critical re-assessment of Anton Boisens life and work. Based in thorough archival research, LaBat argues that Boisen, who suffered from intermittent severe mental illness, was a creative visionary, a mystic who re-imagined pastoral care and envisioned possibilities for the institutionalized other than shame and stigma. He shows how Boisen elucidated new possibilities in patient-centered health care, community care for the mentally ill, and reconciliation and dialogue between religion and science. Boisen explored the borderland of madness and mysticism, illness and inspiration, and practiced an interdisciplinary approach to his craft that is surprisingly modern and more relevant to the practice of medicine and the practice of religion than ever before.

Reviews

At a time when clinical chaplaincy is grappling afresh with its place in 21st century healthcare systems, Sean J. LaBat's portrait of Anton Boisen brings fresh insights by reminding clinical chaplaincy of its origin story. Boisen, the "patron saint" of clinical pastoral education, eschews simple categorization. His was a life of paradox: insight amid madness, flourishing amid brokenness, a legacy of interpersonal connectedness from a life of frequent disconnection. LaBat provides a poignant reminder of the importance of clinical chaplaincy's core commitments to eschewing easy answers, holding the full complexity of human stories, and acknowledging the mysteries that surround us.

--Jason Nieuwsma, department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, Duke University Medical Center

Sean J. LaBat caught something that most of us missed: that "critical mysticism" was a central - not a peripheral - aspect of Boisen's thinking. Boisen - an introspective empirical theologian and psychologist/ sociologist of religion - didn't ignore certain intriguing aspects of the mind just because they were hard to grasp. Rather than just toss out odd thoughts, Boisen asked if those thoughts could be evaluated and if they might bear kernels of truth, even amid confusion. LaBat has broadened our understanding of Boisen's work. His thesis gets all the more intriguing as the book progresses.

--Robert Charles Powell, MD, PhD

Sean J. LaBat's book provides a fascinating description of Anton Boisen that is both thought provoking and a page turner. LaBat details Boisen's enlightening journey that should not be forgotten; this book does a great job ensuring that it will not. The reader will gain greater insight into how mental illness is constructed in historical context and a perspective shift of their own that is well worth the read. I recommend this book for mental health professionals or anyone who is interested in the intersection of psychology and religion.

--Jarrod Reisweber, licensed clinical psychologist; assistant professor, Virginia Commonwealth University

Author Bio

Sean J. LaBat is a clinical staff chaplain at Central Virginia Veterans Administration Medical Center in Richmond, Virginia.

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