
Testimony Therapy: Decolonizing Mental Health for Black Therapists and Clients
Author(s): Makungu M. Akinyela PhD LMFT (Author)
- Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
- Publication Date: May 5, 2026
- Language: English
- Print length: 224 pages
- ISBN-10: 1324082410
- ISBN-13: 9781324082415
Book Description
Centering Black culture and community for liberating, anti-racist therapeutic practice.
This innovative book lays out the journey of family therapist Makungu Akinyela in developing testimony therapy―a healing practice rooted in Black cultural traditions of testifying and storytelling. This book argues that traditional Eurocentric approaches to therapy often perpetuate colonial oppression in the lives of Black clients, and that decolonizing mental health requires centering African American cultural knowledge, history, and community.
Drawing from thinkers from the Black radical critical tradition like Frantz Fanon and W. E. B. Du Bois, Dr. Akinyela frames testimony therapy as a narrative practice grounded in Ubuntu (the African communal self) and the oral traditions of African diasporic peoples. Testimony Therapy maps out theory, practices, and supervision approaches that help therapists support clients in resisting internalized racism, reclaiming self-definition, and nurturing liberated Black identities. Ultimately, this work is a call for Black therapists and clients to engage therapy as cultural resistance―a pathway to repair our souls and build collective freedom beyond Eurocentric limitations.
Editorial Reviews
Review
― Gene Combs, MD, coauthor of Narrative Therapy: The Social Construction of Preferred Realities
“Offers modern-day Western psychology a crucial and overdue challenge to the field’s Eurocentric, noncontextualized, individualist, and colonizing foundations. Akinyela highlights how traditional Western psychological frameworks are not only culturally biased but have historically served as ‘architects of adjustment’ by preserving the status quo, while denying any social responsibility for perpetuating harmful sociopolitical knowledges. Mainstream Western psychology is further implicated in supporting the neoliberal agenda that defines distress, suffering, and trauma as privatized within the individual and viewed as phenomenon of a ‘mismanaged life’ rather than acknowledging relational, cultural, structural, and socioeconomic oppression. Dr. Akinyela’s African-centered approach to narrative therapy and relational interviewing pushes us forward. This book will dramatically change how you practice therapy.”
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“This outstanding book introduces testimony therapy, a pioneering approach that utilizes African American cultural practices of testifying and empowerment through storytelling. It makes a strong case for decolonizing mental health by positioning this narrative therapy within Black historical traditions. Through clinical and supervisory examples, therapists will learn to help clients overcome adversity and oppression by nurturing hopefulness, cultural authenticity, and strong racial identities. It should be required reading in all programs training mental health professionals.”
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About the Author
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