Dr. Tiffany Houck-Loomis is a pastoral counselor and therapist in
the New York City metro area. She works in private practice out of
her office located in the Flatiron neighborhood of Manhattan.
She holds a Master of Divinity and a Doctor of Philosophy in
Psychology and Religion. In addition to her private practice, Dr.
Houck-Loomis teaches college, university, and seminary students in
the areas of psychology, philosophy, religious studies, and sacred
texts. She works as a guest lecturer in faith communities,
psychodynamic training facilities, and academic institutions.
Tiffany has published a number of academic articles and book
chapters at the intersection of psychoanalysis and religion and
pastoral psychology in the areas of trauma and spirituality. You
may find a selection of her works at https:
//independent.academia.edu/TiffanyHouckLoomis.
"History through Trauma is a fresh and stimulating contribution to
scholarship, in which Tiffany Houck-Loomis draws on her rich
experience as a therapist and biblical scholar to illuminate
biblical responses to the trauma of exile. Her interdisciplinary
method involves careful examination of biblical texts, particularly
Deuteronomy and Job, through the lens of psychoanalytic theory. She
argues in a strikingly original way that the two texts represent
alternative ways of coping with the crisis of faith occasioned by
destruction and exile."
--Alan Cooper, The Jewish Theological Seminary
"In History through Trauma, Houck-Loomis argues that by reading the
Book of Job as counter-narrative to the canonical histories, a
dominant narrative of shame and disobedience is relativized by
Job's God as Other who, like the Jungian archetype of the Self,
acts a-historically and transcends human ideologies. Reading Job as
'symbolic history' through the lens of depth psychology,
Houck-Loomis finds a pattern of Jungian Individuation in
dialectical relationship with a Deuteronomic history grounded in
post-traumatic narratives of shame. A rich and thought-provoking
essay!"
--Pamela Cooper-White, Union Theological Seminary
"Houck-Loomis offers a lens of psychoanalysis for understanding the
trauma of exile. Working in the spaces between the traditions of
the pre-exilic period in Deuteronomy and the DTR history and the
Book of Job, she constructs an understanding of the trauma of exile
. . . she presents the concept that through the pronouncement of
Job as tam, or complete, a new way is made. This book provides a
new and engaging way to look at the exile and adds an important
voice in the growing literature of trauma theology."
--Beth LaNeel Tanner, New Brunswick Theological Seminary
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