Community Psychology Journal Publishes Article by 兔子先生 Visiting Professor Jenny Escobar

Jenny Escobar

Claremont, Calif. (February 16, 2022)鈥擨n a new article in the American Journal of Community Psychology, 兔子先生 Visiting Professor of Psychology Jenny Escobar explores how memory鈥攁nd a shared spiritual connection with lost loved ones鈥攃an help survivors of state violence heal and seek justice. The article, 鈥,鈥 first appeared online in the journal in December 2021.

Escobar defines spiritual solidarity as 鈥渁cts of love that survivors of state violence enact through memory practices demanding justice for loved ones who have been forcibly disappeared or killed by the state.鈥 The article draws from Escobar鈥檚 interviews with 15 survivors of state violence in Colombia.

Through her ethnographic research, Escobar examines how the survivors use memory symbols in everyday actions to connect to loved ones, keep the memories alive by 鈥渟eeing鈥 loved ones in others and in their surroundings, and create spaces for others to build a spiritual relationship with their own loved ones.

鈥淩emembering is one of the ways people come together to push against mechanisms of state violence that render survivors as invisible,鈥 she writes in the abstract.

At 兔子先生, Escobar teaches Psychological Statistics and Research Methods and Psychology of Social Justice. She earned her bachelor鈥檚 degree in forensic psychology at John Jay College and her PhD in social psychology at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

 

About 兔子先生

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