Improvisation and authority in illness meaning
Using the example of psychosomatic diagnosis, I argue that the clinical context has unique epistemological constraints that limit the certainty of diagnosis and so make meaning indeterminate for sufferer and healer. As a result, forms of clinical truth are borrowed from the therapeutic context to cr...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Culture, medicine and psychiatry medicine and psychiatry, 1994-06, Vol.18 (2), p.183-214 |
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description | Using the example of psychosomatic diagnosis, I argue that the clinical context has unique epistemological constraints that limit the certainty of diagnosis and so make meaning indeterminate for sufferer and healer. As a result, forms of clinical truth are borrowed from the therapeutic context to create and authorize meanings for ambiguous or ill-defined conditions and inchoate suffering. Diagnostic interpretation is concerned with classification and legitimation through the production of authoritative truth. In contrast, therapeutic interpretation is fundamentally concerned with the pragmatic problem of "how to continue" and hence, with the improvisation of meaning. These different ends give rise to tensions and contradictions in psychosomatic theory and practice. While authority is necessary to provide a structure on which variations of meaning can be improvised, authoritative meanings may also restrict the possibilities for invention by clinician and patient. The goal of patient and physician is to create enough certainty to diminish the threat of the inchoate while preserving enough ambiguity to allow for fresh improvisation. Accounts of illness meaning must recognize the interdependence of normative rigidity and metaphoric invention. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1007/BF01379449 |
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While authority is necessary to provide a structure on which variations of meaning can be improvised, authoritative meanings may also restrict the possibilities for invention by clinician and patient. The goal of patient and physician is to create enough certainty to diminish the threat of the inchoate while preserving enough ambiguity to allow for fresh improvisation. Accounts of illness meaning must recognize the interdependence of normative rigidity and metaphoric invention.</description><subject>Adult and adolescent clinical studies</subject><subject>Authoritarianism</subject><subject>Biological and medical sciences</subject><subject>Female</subject><subject>Humans</subject><subject>Malingering - psychology</subject><subject>Medical sciences</subject><subject>Mental health</subject><subject>Middle Aged</subject><subject>Munchausen Syndrome - psychology</subject><subject>Philosophy, Medical</subject><subject>Physician-Patient Relations</subject><subject>Psychoanalysis</subject><subject>Psychoanalytic Interpretation</subject><subject>Psychoanalytic Theory</subject><subject>Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry</subject><subject>Psychopathology. Psychiatry</subject><subject>Psychophysiologic Disorders - psychology</subject><subject>Sick Role</subject><subject>Somatoform disorders. 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subjects | Adult and adolescent clinical studies Authoritarianism Biological and medical sciences Female Humans Malingering - psychology Medical sciences Mental health Middle Aged Munchausen Syndrome - psychology Philosophy, Medical Physician-Patient Relations Psychoanalysis Psychoanalytic Interpretation Psychoanalytic Theory Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry Psychopathology. Psychiatry Psychophysiologic Disorders - psychology Sick Role Somatoform disorders. Psychosomatics Truth Disclosure |
title | Improvisation and authority in illness meaning |
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