Lost in Dialogue

Anthropology, Psychopathology, and Care

Giovanni Stanghellini author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:3rd Nov '16

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Lost in Dialogue cover

The field of psychiatry has long struggled with developing models of practice; most underemphasize the interpersonal aspects of clinical practice. This essay is unique in putting intersubjectivity front and center. It is an attempt to provide a clinical method to re-establish the fragile dialogue of the soul with oneself and with others. Throughout, the book builds on the assumption that to be human means to be in dialogue. It uses dialogue as a unitary concept to address three essential issues for clinical practice: 'What is a human being?', 'What is mental pathology'?, and 'What is care?'. To be human - it is argued - means to be in dialogue with oneself and with other persons. Thus, mental pathology is the interruption of this dialogue - both of the person with the alterity that inhabits them, and with the alterity incarnated in other persons. Therefore, therapy is a dialogue with a method whose aim is to re-enact one's interrupted dialogue with alterity. Lost in Dialogue provides a method to approximate the Other, to understand its experiences, actions, and in general, understand the world in which it lives.

this book... will be a valuable resource for those who seek to refer to the essential work of integrating psychotherapeutical and phenomenological approaches into scientific investigation * Ragna Winniewski , Humanities Cologne in Germany and MSCA fellow in the EUmanities programme, Metapsychology Online Reviews *
Stanghellini has written an interesting addition to the International Perspectives in Philosophy and Psychiatry series. It is heavily weighted to psychodynamic and phenomenological thought, and conceptually has depth and strength. * Robert A. Bischoff, PsyCRITIQUES *

ISBN: 9780198792062

Dimensions: 234mm x 163mm x 12mm

Weight: 348g

228 pages