Voices in Psychosis 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.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Part One: Orientations
- 1: Angela Woods, Ben Alderson-Day, Charles Fernyhough: Voices in Psychosis: Interdisciplinary Listening
- 2: Guy Dodgson, Stephanie Common, Peter Moseley, Rebecca Lee, Ben Alderson-Day: Voices in Context: What Do Early Intervention in Psychosis Services Offer?
- 3: 'Isaac' (Pseudonym): Reflecting on Voices
- Part Two: The Experience of Hearing Voices
- 4: Gillian Allnutt: The Quickening
- 5: Ben Alderson-Day, Thomas Ward: The Sound of Fear
- 6: Åsa Jansson: Affect and Voice-Hearing: Past and Present
- 7: Jamie Moffatt: Bodily Sensations During Voice-Hearing Experiences: A Role for Interoception?
- 8: Peter Moseley, Kaja Mitrenga: The Varieties and Complexities of Multimodal Hallucinations in Psychosis
- 9: John Foxwell: Lost Agency and the Sense of Control
- 10: Adam J. Powell: Pollution and Purity: Understanding Voices as Punishment for Un-Wholly Sins
- Part Three: Approaching Experience
- 11: Hilary Powell: Voices in Psychosis: A Medieval Perspective
- 12: Tehseen Noorani: Conspiration in the Archive: Sense-Making and the Research Interview Methodology
- 13: Marco Bernini: Reading for Departure: Narrative Theory and Phenomenological Interviews on Hallucinations
- 14: Angela Woods: Relating to Leah's Voices
- Part Four: Locating Voices in Language
- 15: Sam Wilkinson, Joel Krueger: The Phenomenology of Voice-Hearing and Two Concepts of Voice
- 16: Felicity Deamer: Bridging the Gap in Common Ground When Talking about Voices
- 17: Elena Semino, Luke Collins, Zsófia Demjén: Silences in First-Person Accounts of Voice-Hearing: A Linguistic Approach
- Part Five: Spatial and Relational Dimensions
- 18: Peter Garratt: Household Ghosts and Personified Presences
- 19: Mary Coaten: Voice-Hearing and Lived Space
- 20: Patricia Waugh: Vagabond Narratives: To Be Without a Home
- 21: Christopher C.H. Cook: Leah's Voices: Reflections on Auditory Verbal Hallucinations as Spiritual and Religious Experience
- 22: Anna Luce, Nicola Barclay: 'I just feel like there's just lots of people in my head!' Reciprocal Roles and Voice-Hearing
- 23: David Dupuis: Learning to Navigate Hallucinations: Comparing Voice Control Ability During Psychosis and in Ritual Use of Psychedelics
- 24: Akiko Hart: Then I open the door and walk into their world': Crossing the Threshold and Hearing the Voice
- Part Six: Voice-Hearing and Mental Processes
- 25: Charles Fernyhough: Remembering Voices
- 26: Colleen Rollins, Jane Garrison: Voices and Reality Monitoring: How Do We Know What Is Real?
- 27: Corinne Saunders: Supernatural Presences: Medieval and Modern Narratives of Voice-Hearing
- 28: David Napthine: Maelstrom