Harsh Esther Valora
Independent Researcher, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
Centre for Research into Reading, Literature and Society (CRILS), University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
Front Psychol. 2022 Nov 25;13:1025914. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.1025914. eCollection 2022.
This paper examines a live shared-reading group conducted through The Reader Organization, with the approval of the University of Liverpool's ethics committee. It is a revised excerpt from a successful inter-disciplinary Ph.D. thesis undertaken within the School of Psychology. The intention in forming the group was to explore the reading of Marilynne Robinson's by a wide variety of modern readers of different backgrounds and persuasions, in the light of religious writing in an age of diminished religious tradition. The main research question was to test what literature can do in carrying meaning which can be seen as religious, or was previously deemed religious, among readers who may not think of themselves in such terms. The second was to see how a shared community-group setting can enable collaborative engagement with the challenge to develop different ways of thinking, beyond the individual default of either religious dogma or anti-religious prejudice. The method employed overall in the wider Ph.D. study was Grounded Theory: essentially, empirical analysis rather than top-down conceptualization. Grounded Theory, in refusing to begin from rigidly preassembled categories, is appropriate to a literature-inflected study and, in particular, a literary study that is concerned with religious meaning in situations of humanitarian crisis. It allows the possibility of empirical work and careful detailed analysis, amid a complex of overlapping psychological, spiritual, and family concerns entangled within the experience of modern life. In this particular case study, which may be described as a form of Action Research, the researcher, also acting as the reader leader of the group, brought developed tools taken from psychologist Wilfred Bion, introduced to the reading group itself during the sessions as a means of measurement and navigation through the novel. If the aim was simply to undertake a study of the text, then this paper would be more narrowly literary, but the concern was with wider real-world effects in relation to individuals within the group work. Through close examination of the week-by-week transcripts of the reading group, this study highlights the search for moments of development, or what might have stood in the way of development. The researcher used a consensus group of three supervisors to check the selection of the best moments (failing or succeeding in coming closer to what will be called below, after Bion, "0") recorded in the written transcripts of the sessions. One of the most powerful findings in this study is what will be called a mini-tradition developed by the group members in praxis, in terms of practices which they find, use, and come back to during their work with more difficult and painful passages in the text.
本文考察了一个经利物浦大学伦理委员会批准、由“阅读者组织”开展的现场共享阅读小组。它是一篇成功的跨学科博士论文的修订节选,该论文是在心理学院完成的。组建这个小组的目的是,鉴于宗教传统式微时代的宗教写作,探讨不同背景和信仰的众多现代读者对玛丽莲·罗宾逊作品的阅读情况。主要研究问题是,检验文学在那些可能不认为自己有宗教倾向的读者中,传递可被视为宗教意义或曾被视为宗教意义的内容时能发挥什么作用。第二个问题是,观察一个共享的社区小组环境如何能够促使人们以合作的方式应对挑战,以超越宗教教义或反宗教偏见这种个人默认思维模式,培养不同的思维方式。在更广泛的博士研究中总体采用的方法是扎根理论:本质上是实证分析而非自上而下的概念化。扎根理论拒绝从严格预先设定的类别出发,适用于一项受文学影响的研究,特别是一项关注人道主义危机情境中宗教意义的文学研究。它使得在现代生活经历中交织着的复杂的心理、精神和家庭问题中,进行实证研究和细致入微的详细分析成为可能。在这个可被描述为行动研究形式的具体案例研究中,研究者同时担任小组的阅读领导者,引入了从心理学家威尔弗雷德·比昂那里借鉴来的成熟工具,并在阅读过程中介绍给阅读小组,作为衡量和研读小说的一种方式。如果目标仅仅是对文本进行研究,那么本文的文学性会更强,但关注点在于与小组工作中的个体相关的更广泛的现实世界影响。通过仔细研读阅读小组逐周的文字记录,本研究突出了对发展时刻的探寻,或者那些可能阻碍发展的因素。研究者使用了一个由三位导师组成的共识小组,来核查从各次会议的文字记录中挑选出的最佳时刻(成功或失败地更接近下文将在比昂之后提到的“0”)。本研究中最有力的发现之一是,小组成员在实践中形成了一种可被称为“小传统”的东西,即他们在处理文本中更困难、更痛苦的段落时所发现、运用并反复回归的实践方法。