Repository | Journal | Volume | Article

143287

Schizophrenia and the experience of intersubjectivity as threat

Paul Lysaker Jason K. Johannesen John Lysaker(Department of French & Italian, Clemson University)

pp. 335-352

Abstract

Many with schizophrenia find social interactions a profound and terrifying threat to their sense of self. To better understand this we draw upon dialogical models of the self that suggest that those with schizophrenia have difficulty sustaining dialogues among diverse aspects of self. Because interpersonal exchanges solicit and evoke movement among diverse aspects of self, many with schizophrenia may consequently find those exchanges overwhelming, resulting in despair, the sensation of fusion with another, and/or self-dissolution. In short, compromised dialogical capacities may be a contributing factor to social dysfunction in schizophrenia.

Publication details

Published in:

(2005) Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 4 (3).

Pages: 335-352

DOI: 10.1007/s11097-005-4067-1

Full citation:

Lysaker Paul, Johannesen Jason K., Lysaker John (2005) „Schizophrenia and the experience of intersubjectivity as threat“. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 4 (3), 335–352.