Department of Linguistics and English Language, Lancaster University Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, Lancaster, Lancashire, UK
Centre for Applied Linguistics, University College London Institute of Education, London, UK.
Med Humanit. 2021 Sep;47(3):354-364. doi: 10.1136/medhum-2020-011940. Epub 2020 Dec 4.
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.
在本文中,我们运用文学语言学对故事世界人物的研究概念和见解,来揭示声音作为社会代理在生活经验中声音体验的本质。我们展示了临床心理学中声音作为社会代理的方法与文学语言学中对小说人物的感知之间的显著重叠,但认为文学语言学的方法更便于对声音的不同程度的人格化进行更细致的描述。我们提出了一个声音的特征化模型,并通过比较精神病干预中对两个声音体验者的访谈中的声音的生活体验描述,展示了其解释潜力。通过应用该模型获得的对声音体验现象学的新见解,与声音体验的理解以及治疗干预都相关。