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The fieldwork model: An anthropological perspective on the process of change in long-term psychoanalytic psychotherapy
Authors:Christina Moutsou
Institution:1. Philadelphia Association , 4 Marty's Yard, 17 Hampstead High Street, London NW3 1QW, UK cmoutsou@gmail.com
Abstract:The question of what takes place in the psychoanalytic consulting room, and whether it has any therapeutic effect on the patient, has consistently been behind various criticisms of the long-term psychoanalytically informed therapies. When it comes to goal-oriented talking therapies –the only ones favoured by the state mechanism – statistical proof of their efficacy is thought of as proof of their scientific value. However, disciplines such as social anthropology have consistently based their complex understanding of social phenomena in qualitative data. This article draws upon the anthropological fieldwork model. It also looks at how anthropological theory has evolved as a result of the increasing centrality of the fieldwork model and a gradual acceptance of the inter-subjective process. It aims to highlight how lived experience, the paradigm on which the fieldwork model is based, constitutes a highly effective way of understanding in depth the patient and the patient's history. Such understanding is in turn the main factor behind profound and lasting psychological change. It is argued here that psychotherapy research and practice could be enhanced by following the example of anthropological qualitative research.
Keywords:fieldwork  intersubjectivity  lived experience  qualitative research  therapeutic change
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