Dissociation - a preliminary contextual model

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dc.contributor.author Kruger, Christa
dc.contributor.author Sokudela, Funeka Brenda
dc.contributor.author Motlana, L.M.
dc.contributor.author Mataboge, C.K.
dc.contributor.author Dikobe, A.M.
dc.date.accessioned 2008-02-01T12:43:35Z
dc.date.available 2008-02-01T12:43:35Z
dc.date.issued 2007-02
dc.description.abstract BACKGROUND: The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) system has certain limitations when applied to two South African examples of dissociation, because it is descriptive (non-explanatory) and focuses on intrapsychic (non-communal)processes. Even the existing Western explanatory models of dissociation fail to accommodate fully the communal aspects of dissociation in our South African context. OBJECTIVES AND METHODS: The aim was to explore an expanded perspective on dissociation that does not limit it to an intrapsychic phenomenon, but that accounts for the interrelatedness of individuals within their social context. Autoethnography was used. In this article a collective, socially orientated, contextual hermeneutic was applied to two local examples of dissociation. Three existing Western models were expanded along multicontextual, collective lines, for them to be more useful in the pluralistic South African context. RESULTS: This preliminary contextual model of dissociation includes a person's interpersonal, socio-cultural, and spiritual contexts, in addition to the intrapsychic context. Dissociationis considered to be a normal information-processing tool that maintains balanced, coherent selves-in-society, i.e. individuals connected to each other. In the South African context dissociation appears mostly as a normal phenomenon and seldom as a sign of mental illness. Dissociation is pivotal for the normal construction of individual and communal identities in the face of conflicting sets of information from various contexts. Dissociation may help individuals or communities to survive in a world of conflicting messages, where conflict is often interpersonal / cultural / societal in nature, rather than primarily intrapsychic. CONCLUSIONS: This model should be developed and evaluated further. Such evaluation would require suitable new local terminology. en
dc.format.extent 159346 bytes
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.identifier.citation Kruger, C, Sokudela, BF, Motlana, LM, Mataboge, CK & Dikobe, AM 2007, 'Dissociation - a preliminary contextual model', South African Journal of Psychiatry, vol. 13, no. 1, pp.13-17, 20-21. [http://www.hmpg.co.za/journaldetail.php?journalno=4] en
dc.identifier.issn 1608-9685
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2263/4341
dc.language.iso en en
dc.publisher Health and Medical Publishing Group en
dc.rights Health and Medical Publishing Group en
dc.subject Dissociation en
dc.subject Auto-ethnography en
dc.subject South African contextual model en
dc.subject Western models en
dc.subject Social healing en
dc.subject Communal dissociation en
dc.subject.lcsh Dissociation (Psychology)
dc.subject.lcsh South Africa
dc.subject.mesh Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
dc.title Dissociation - a preliminary contextual model en
dc.type Article en


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