Intersubjectivity and the schizophrenic experience: a hermeneutic phenomoneological exploration of being-in-relation

This research project has its origin and motivation in work done by Lysaker, Johannesen and Lysaker (2005), which explored the experience of being as a person with schizophrenia in relation to other individuals. The researchers examined the nature of the schizophrenic experience from within the fram...

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Main Author: Bradfield, Bruce Christopher
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Rhodes University 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1002449
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-rhodes-vital-29402018-06-08T04:07:33ZIntersubjectivity and the schizophrenic experience: a hermeneutic phenomoneological exploration of being-in-relationBradfield, Bruce ChristopherSchizophreniaIntersubjectivityThis research project has its origin and motivation in work done by Lysaker, Johannesen and Lysaker (2005), which explored the experience of being as a person with schizophrenia in relation to other individuals. The researchers examined the nature of the schizophrenic experience from within the framework of the dialogical model of self, and presented schizophrenic intersubjectivity as a potentially horrifying and disintegrating experience. Lysaker et al (2005) discuss the notion that the individual self unfolds as a composite structure of multiple selves, existing in dialogical interaction with one another. Their research aimed to show that the individual with schizophrenia experiences difficulty tolerating this dialogue on an intrapsychic level. Because interpersonal exchange requires that individuals adopt a variety of self-other modes of relatedness, suggest Lysaker et al, interpersonal engagement for the person with schizophrenia is disclosed as profoundly threatening (ibid.) Moving from the above-mentioned research, this project aims through a hermeneutic phenomenological process to clarify and narrate the subtleties of the intersubjective experience, as that experience is disclosed in the lived world of a person with schizophrenia. How does such an individual experience self in relation to other? How does such an individual negotiate their sense of self in terms of their dialogicality? The phenomenological hermeneutic method, as shaped by such theorists as Gadamer (1976), Heidegger (1962) and Buber (1970), will emerge as the interpretive platform upon which these questions are approached.Rhodes UniversityFaculty of Humanities, Psychology2006ThesisMastersMA107 pagespdfvital:2940http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1002449EnglishBradfield, Bruce Christopher
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Schizophrenia
Intersubjectivity
spellingShingle Schizophrenia
Intersubjectivity
Bradfield, Bruce Christopher
Intersubjectivity and the schizophrenic experience: a hermeneutic phenomoneological exploration of being-in-relation
description This research project has its origin and motivation in work done by Lysaker, Johannesen and Lysaker (2005), which explored the experience of being as a person with schizophrenia in relation to other individuals. The researchers examined the nature of the schizophrenic experience from within the framework of the dialogical model of self, and presented schizophrenic intersubjectivity as a potentially horrifying and disintegrating experience. Lysaker et al (2005) discuss the notion that the individual self unfolds as a composite structure of multiple selves, existing in dialogical interaction with one another. Their research aimed to show that the individual with schizophrenia experiences difficulty tolerating this dialogue on an intrapsychic level. Because interpersonal exchange requires that individuals adopt a variety of self-other modes of relatedness, suggest Lysaker et al, interpersonal engagement for the person with schizophrenia is disclosed as profoundly threatening (ibid.) Moving from the above-mentioned research, this project aims through a hermeneutic phenomenological process to clarify and narrate the subtleties of the intersubjective experience, as that experience is disclosed in the lived world of a person with schizophrenia. How does such an individual experience self in relation to other? How does such an individual negotiate their sense of self in terms of their dialogicality? The phenomenological hermeneutic method, as shaped by such theorists as Gadamer (1976), Heidegger (1962) and Buber (1970), will emerge as the interpretive platform upon which these questions are approached.
author Bradfield, Bruce Christopher
author_facet Bradfield, Bruce Christopher
author_sort Bradfield, Bruce Christopher
title Intersubjectivity and the schizophrenic experience: a hermeneutic phenomoneological exploration of being-in-relation
title_short Intersubjectivity and the schizophrenic experience: a hermeneutic phenomoneological exploration of being-in-relation
title_full Intersubjectivity and the schizophrenic experience: a hermeneutic phenomoneological exploration of being-in-relation
title_fullStr Intersubjectivity and the schizophrenic experience: a hermeneutic phenomoneological exploration of being-in-relation
title_full_unstemmed Intersubjectivity and the schizophrenic experience: a hermeneutic phenomoneological exploration of being-in-relation
title_sort intersubjectivity and the schizophrenic experience: a hermeneutic phenomoneological exploration of being-in-relation
publisher Rhodes University
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1002449
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