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ARTICLES

Auditory Hallucinations as Social Self-Positions: A Theoretical Discussion from a Single-Case Study

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Pages 132-153 | Received 09 Apr 2010, Accepted 24 Mar 2011, Published online: 28 Feb 2012
 

Abstract

This work uses social positioning analysis to investigate the phenomenon of the auditory verbal hallucination (AVH) in schizophrenia in order to describe its social and interactive nature. We focus in detail on a single-case study of a patient who verbalized her AVHs. We analyze 3 significant excerpts from an interview with a person with paranoid schizophrenia. This interview is part of a larger study conducted with 18 participants about life narrative construction in the sociocultural context of care homes. The interaction between the patient and her voices is examined closely to reveal the dynamic between interviewer, patient, and voices. The analysis differentiates the voice of the patient from that of the hallucination and reveals “social interaction” between this dyad and the interviewer. We discuss a possible social and interactive framework to understand the origin of AVHs and the self-construction process.

Notes

1. Betis is a football club.

2. Triana is a neighborhood in an Andalusian city in Spain.

3. Los Remedios is a neighborhood in an Andalusian city.

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