Skip to main content

Person-ness of voices in lived experience accounts of psychosis: combining literary linguistics and clinical psychology.

Author
Abstract
:

In this paper, we use concepts and insights from the literary linguistic study of story-world characters to shed new light on the nature of voices as social agents in the context of lived experience accounts of voice-hearing. We demonstrate a considerable overlap between approaches to voices as social agents in clinical psychology and the perception of characters in the linguistic study of fiction, but argue that the literary linguistic approach facilitates a much more nuanced account of the different degrees of person-ness voices might be perceived to possess. We propose a scalar Characterisation Model of Voices and demonstrate its explanatory potential by comparing two lived experience descriptions of voices in interviews with voice-hearers in a psychosis intervention. The new insights into the phenomenology of voice-hearing achieved by applying the model are relevant to the understanding of voice-hearing as well as to therapeutic interventions.

Year of Publication
:
2021
Journal
:
Medical humanities
Volume
:
47
Issue
:
3
Number of Pages
:
354-364
ISSN Number
:
1468-215X
URL
:
https://mh.bmj.com/lookup/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=33277294
DOI
:
10.1136/medhum-2020-011940
Short Title
:
Med Humanit
Download citation