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El. knyga: Time and Body: Phenomenological and Psychopathological Approaches

  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 12-Nov-2020
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781108800303
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 12-Nov-2020
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781108800303

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Time and Body promotes the application of phenomenological psychopathology and embodied research to a broad spectrum of mental disorders. In a new and practical way, it integrates the latest research on the temporal and intersubjective constitution of the body, self and its mental disorders from phenomenological, embodied and interdisciplinary research perspectives. The authors investigate how temporal processes apply to the contribution of embodiment and selfhood, as well as to their destabilization, such as in eating disorders and borderline personality disorders, schizophrenia, depression, social anxiety or dementia. The chapters demonstrate the applicability of phenomenological psychopathology to a range of illnesses and its relevance to treatment and clinical practice.

This book guides advanced undergraduates, researchers and practitioners through current debates at the interface of psychology, phenomenology, and psychiatry. It demonstrates how psychopathology benefits from phenomenological and embodied approaches, and how they combine to apply to a range of mental disorders.

Recenzijos

'Offering a solid overview of the important topics in the linkage between phenomenology and psychopathology, this volume will appeal to scholars of philosophy, psychology, and psychiatry, as well as to practitioners seeking a deeper understanding of common mental illness ... Highly recommended.' M. Uebel, Choice Magazine ' the volume collects a reputable and recommendable compilation of texts which can rightfully serve as a standard reference for the contemporary state of the art in phenomenological psychopathology. It is safe to say that the aim of the editors 'to present new insights from phenomenological psychopathology' has been successfully reached.' Alexander Nicolai Wendt, Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences ' the book offers some important contributions (particularly, Tewes & Stanghellini, 2021; Fuchs, 2021; Legrand, 2021; Kųster, 2021; Ratcliffe & Bortolan, 2021; Schmidt, 2021; Froese & Krueger, 2021) to enlightening the interconnection between temporality, embodiment and intersubjectivity (Fuchs, 2013b, 2017, 2018b) and its significance for psychopathology (Fuchs, 2021).' Emilia Barile, Phenomenological Reviews

Daugiau informacijos

This book advances the development of phenomenological psychopathology and demonstrates its applicability to a spectrum of mental disorders.
List of Figures
xi
List of Contributors
xiii
1 Introduction - Time and Body: Phenomenological and Psychopathological Approaches
1(11)
Christian Tewes
Giovanni Stanghellini
2 Time, the Body, and the Other in Phenomenology and Psychopathology
12(31)
Thomas Fuchs
PART I BODY AND TIME: GENERAL ASPECTS
3 The Body - Another: Phenomenological and Psychoanalytic Perspectives
43(17)
Dorothee Legrand
3.1 Commentary on "The Body - Another: Phenomenological and Psychoanalytic Perspectives"
55(5)
Phenomenology and Psychoanalysis: Disruptive Speech in the Realm of the Flesh
Stefan Kristensen
4 The Heart of Darkness of the Living Body
60(22)
Giovanni Stanghellini
4.1 Commentary on "The Heart of Darkness of the Living Body"
76(6)
The Epiphany of the Body: Some Remarks on the Translation of Leib from German
Lorenzo Gilardi
5 Microphenomenology of Chronicity in Psychosomatic Diseases: Diabetes, Anorexia, and Schizophrenia
82(22)
Natalie Depraz
5.1 Commentary on "Microphenomenology of Chronicity in Psychosomatic Diseases: Diabetes, Anorexia, and Schizophrenia"
98(6)
Chronicity as Stigma
Samuel Thoma
6 Time and Embodiment in the Process of Psychotherapy: A Dynamical Systems Perspective
104(21)
Wolfgang Tschacher
6.1 Commentary on "Time and Embodiment in the Process of Psychotherapy: A Dynamical Systems Perspective"
117(8)
The Musicality of Human Interaction
Valeria Bizzari
Part II Grief and Anxiety
7 Bereavement and the Meaning of Profound Feelings of Emptiness: An Existential-Phenomenological Analysis
125(25)
Allan Kester
7.1 Commentary on "Bereavement and the Meaning of Profound Feelings of Emptiness: An Existential-Phenomenological Analysis"
144(6)
Relearning the Self among Intimate Others
Ditte Winther-Lindqvist
8 Body-as-Object in Social Situations: Toward a Phenomenology of Social Anxiety
150(27)
Shogo Tanaka
8.1 Commentary on "Body-as-Object in Social Situations: Toward a Phenomenology of Social Anxiety"
170(7)
Defending Pluralism in Social Anxiety Disorder: Integrating Phenomenological Perspectives
Adrian Spremberg
PART III BORDERLINE PERSONALITY AND EATING DISORDERS
9 Emotion Regulation in a Disordered World: Understanding Borderline Personality Disorder
177(29)
Matthew Ratcliffe
Anna Bortolan
9.1 Commentary on "Emotion Regulation in a Disordered World: Understanding Borderline Personality Disorder"
201(5)
On the Scope of Interpersonal Explanation: Destructivity and Emptiness as Responses to Felt Dependency
Philipp Schmidt
10 Nobody? Disturbed Self-Experience in Borderline Personality Disorder and Four Kinds of Instabilities
206(28)
Philipp Schmidt
10.1 Commentary on "Nobody? Disturbed Self-Experience in Borderline Personality Disorder and Four Kinds of Instabilities"
230(4)
Who? Nobody? The Existence of Flesh
Milena Mancini
11 Levels of Embodiment: A Husserlian Analysis of Gender and the Development of Eating Disorders
234(29)
Lanei M. Rodemeyer
11.1 Commentary on "Levels of Embodiment: A Husserlian Analysis of Gender and the Development of Eating Disorders"
256(7)
Agency, Environmental Scaffolding, and the Development of Eating Disorders Joel
Krueger
Lucy Osier
12 Phenomenology of Corporeality (and Spatiality) in Anorexia Nervosa with a Reference to the Problem of Its Temporality
263(26)
Otto Doerr-Zegers
Hector Pelegrina-Cetran
12.1 Commentary on "Phenomenology of Corporeality (and Spatiality) in Anorexia Nervosa with a Reference to the Problem of Its Temporality"
282(7)
Anorexia Nervosa: Linking the Phenomenology to Cultural and Neuropsychological Aspects of the Disease
Adrian P. Mundt
PART IV DEPRESSION, SCHIZOPHRENIA, AND DEMENTIA
13 Intrinsic Temporality in Depression: Classical Phenomenological Psychiatry, Affectivity, and Narrative
289(29)
Edward A. Lenzo
Shaun Gallagher
13.1 Commentary on "Intrinsic Temporality in Depression: Classical Phenomenological Psychiatry, Affectivity, and Narrative"
311(7)
Temporality and Affectivity in Depression and Schizophrenia
Tom Froese
14 Lost in the Socially Extended Mind: Genuine Intersubjectivity and Disturbed Self-Other Demarcation in Schizophrenia
318(28)
Tom Froese
Joel Krueger
14.1 Commentary on "Lost in the Socially Extended Mind: Genuine Intersubjectivity and Disturbed Self-Other Demarcation in Schizophrenia"
341(5)
Mimicry and Normativity
Edward A. Lenzo
Shaun Gallagher
15 Closing Up: The Phenomenology of Catatonia
346(21)
Zeno Van Duppen
Pascal Sienaert
15.1 Commentary on "Closing Up: The Phenomenology of Catatonia"
363(4)
Catatonia, Intercorporeality, and the Question of Phenomenological Specificity
Matthew Ratcliffe
16 Embodied Selfhood and Personal Identity in Dementia
367(29)
Christian Tewes
16.1 Commentary on "Embodied Selfhood and Personal Identity in Dementia"
390(6)
A Lifeworld Account of Personal Identity
Erik Norman Dzwiza-Ohlsen
Index 396
Christian Tewes is Adjunct Professor (Privatdozent) of Philosophy at the University of Jena, Germany. His research interests comprise embodiment theories, phenomenology, philosophy of mind and anthropology. Giovanni Stanghellini is a psychiatrist, Chair of the School of Phenomenological-dynamic Psychotherapy, and Professor of Dynamic Psychology at 'G. d'Annunzio' University, Italy.