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oapen-20.500.12657-581762022-09-10T03:03:17Z Voices in Psychosis Woods, Angela Alderson-Day, Ben Fernyhough, Charles voice-hearing, phenomenology, interdisciplinarity, psychosis, mental health services, trauma bic Book Industry Communication::J Society & social sciences::JM Psychology::JMP Abnormal psychology bic Book Industry Communication::J Society & social sciences::JM Psychology::JMQ Psychology: emotions bic Book Industry Communication::J Society & social sciences::JM Psychology::JMS The self, ego, identity, personality bic Book Industry Communication::M Medicine::MM Other branches of medicine::MMH Psychiatry bic Book Industry Communication::J Society & social sciences::JK Social services & welfare, criminology::JKS Social welfare & social services::JKSM Care of the mentally ill 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. 2022-09-09T09:19:30Z 2022-09-09T09:19:30Z 2022 book https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/58176 eng application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International 9780192653444_WEB.pdf https://global.oup.com/academic/product/voices-in-psychosis-9780192898388?q=voices%20in%20psychosis&lang=en&cc=gb# Oxford University Press 10.1093/ oso/ 9780192898388.001.0001 10.1093/ oso/ 9780192898388.001.0001 b9501915-cdee-4f2a-8030-9c0b187854b2 d859fbd3-d884-4090-a0ec-baf821c9abfd Wellcome 272 Oxford Wellcome Trust Wellcome open access
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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.
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