Navigating Racial Landscapes: Wholeness and Wounds
Book Details
- Publisher : Karnac Books
- Published : June 2026
- Cover : Paperback
- Pages : 160
- Category :
Forthcoming - Category 2 :
Psychoanalysis - Catalogue No : 98523
- ISBN 13 : 9781800134577
- ISBN 10 : 1800134576
Also by Aileen Alleyne
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In Navigating Racial Landscapes: Wholeness and Wounds, the therapy room becomes a microcosm of the world’s racial tensions, where the work involves both exploring the inner topography of the self and crossing the visible borders between us.
Navigating Racial Landscapes: Wholeness and Wounds is both a personal reflection and a professional manifesto, authored by a Black psychotherapist who has spent decades facilitating, teaching, and consulting within predominantly white spaces. Part memoir, part critical analysis, this book explores the psychological, relational, and political aspects of race in psychotherapy, questioning what it truly takes to navigate this experience with integrity.
Drawing on over thirty years as a psychodynamic psychotherapist, clinical supervisor, educator, and organisational consultant, Aileen offers a rare insider–outsider perspective. Her reflections seamlessly shift between the consulting room, the training environment, and the broader sociopolitical landscape, exposing the unspoken racial dynamics that influence every interaction. From the emotional toll of publishing her work on Black ancestral trauma to the exhaustion of teaching white individuals about race and the weaponisation of the term ‘woke’, these essays combine rigorous analysis with lived experience to highlight often overlooked issues.
The chapters alternate between historical analysis, theoretical context, case vignettes, and personal accounts. They are not presented as a manual but as provocations, invitations, and challenges. Readers are encouraged to reflect on their own racial positioning; to understand the body’s automatic responses to racial difference through a neurobiopsychosocial (polyvagal) perspective; to listen “in colour” by attuning to silences as much as speech; and to recognise how race appears in love relationships as well as in professional ones.
Reflexive, uncompromising, and sometimes unsettling, Navigating Racial Landscapes dismisses quick fixes and ready-made scripts. Instead, it promotes a continuous, embodied approach to race that values complexity without becoming defensive or despairing. Race is not an abstract subject to be mastered, but a landscape we all must learn to navigate – with humility, courage, and care. It is a book for therapists, trainers, educators, and anyone committed to engaging with race as more than just an abstract concept but as a lived, felt, and relational reality.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
About the author
Preface and introduction
1. Post-publication blues
2. Why I’m tired of teaching white people about race
3. Woke: From political awakening to cultural battleground
4. Listening in colour
5. “YOU make me WHOLE”—oppressive submission or liberating gratitude? (Read that again please)
Epilogue—walking the landscape once more
References
Index
About the Author(s)
Dr Aileen Alleyne is a UKCP-registered psychodynamic psychotherapist, clinical supervisor, and organisational consultant in private practice. She is a visiting lecturer at several psychotherapy training institutions and a specialist consultant on race and cultural diversity across major public-sector organisations, including the National Health Service, social services, education, and police services. Her first book, The Burden of Heritage: Hauntings of Generational Trauma on Black Lives (Karnac, 2022), was nominated for the 2023 Gradiva Award and has become an invaluable teaching and research resource within the counselling and psychotherapy community. Aileen’s clinical research examines the lived experiences of Black workers across the NHS, education, and social care sectors, offering a significant contribution to understanding racism as an enduring psychological trauma. Central to her work is the concept of the internal oppressor, a framework that deepens insight into the complex psychological responses to racial wounding.
She is the author of numerous book chapters and peer-reviewed papers on Black–White relational dynamics, shame and identity injury, and the challenges of diversity in organisational life. While she now engages more selectively in public speaking, she continues to shape contemporary discourse through her writing, teaching, and carefully chosen contributions to professional and academic spaces.
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