Voices in Psychosis: Interdisciplinary Perspectives [Internet]
- PMID: 37490569
- Bookshelf ID: NBK593355
- DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780192898388.001.0001
Voices in Psychosis: Interdisciplinary Perspectives [Internet]
Excerpt
Voices in Psychosis: Interdisciplinary Perspectives deepens and extends the understanding of hearing voices in psychosis in a striking way. For the first time, this collection brings multiple disciplinary, clinical and experiential perspectives to bear on an original and extraordinarily rich body of testimony: transcripts of forty in-depth phenomenological interviews conducted with people who hear voices and who have accessed Early Intervention in Psychosis services. Voice-hearing experiences associated with psychosis are highly varied, frequently distressing, poorly understood, and deeply stigmatized, even within mental health services. Voices in Psychosis responds to the urgent need for new ways of listening to and making sense of these experiences. The book addresses the social, clinical and research contexts in which the interviews took place, thoroughly investigating the embodied, multisensory, affective, linguistic, spatial, and relational qualities of voice-hearing experiences. The nature, politics, and consequences of these analytic endeavours is a focus of critical reflection throughout. This volume presents a collection of essays by members and associates of the Hearing the Voice project that were written in response to the transcripts. Each chapter gives a multifaceted insight into the experiences of voice-hearers in the North East of England and to their wider resonance in contexts ranging from medieval mysticism to Amazonian shamanism, from the nineteenth-century novel to the twenty-first-century survivor movement.
Copyright © Angela Woods, Ben Alderson-Day, Charles Fernyhough, and the contributors listed on pages xvii-xvii, 2022.
Sections
- Cover Acknowledgement
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Contributors
- PART ONE. ORIENTATIONS
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PART TWO. THE EXPERIENCE OF HEARING VOICES
- 4. The Quickening
- 5. The Sound of Fear
- 6. Affect and Voice-Hearing: Past and Present
- 7. Bodily Sensations During Voice-Hearing Experiences: A Role for Interoception?
- 8. The Varieties and Complexities of Multimodal Hallucinations in Psychosis
- 9. Lost Agency and the Sense of Control
- 10. Pollution and Purity: Understanding Voices as Punishment for Un-Wholly Sins
- PART THREE. APPROACHING EXPERIENCE
- PART FOUR. LOCATING VOICES IN LANGUAGE
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PART FIVE. SPATIAL AND RELATIONAL DIMENSIONS
- 18. Household Ghosts and Personified Presences
- 19. Voice-Hearing and Lived Space
- 20. Vagabond Narratives: To Be Without a Home
- 21. Leah’s Voices: Reflections on Auditory Verbal Hallucinations as Spiritual and Religious Experience
- 22. ‘I Just Feel Like There’s Just Lots of People in My Head!’: Reciprocal Roles and Voice-Hearing
- 23. Learning to Navigate Hallucinations: Comparing Voice Control Ability During Psychosis and in Ritual Use of Psychedelics
- 24. ‘Then I Open the Door and Walk into Their World’: Crossing the Threshold and Hearing the Voice
- PART SIX. VOICE-HEARING AND MENTAL PROCESSES