Master of Arts, The Ohio State University, 2022, Medical Humanities and Social Sciences
In this thesis, I use a close reading of two memoirs by existential psychiatrist Irvin Yalom to develop a narrative approach to psychiatry. This approach treats each patient's story as a unique work of literature. It involves the psychiatrist's listening for literary elements such as tone, incongruity, and figurative speech in patient stories. It also requires the psychiatrist's engagement in cooperative acts of storytelling and interpretation, which, I suggest, provide insight into the patient's inner and outer life. This insight helps the psychiatrist to understand the patient's needs, whether these needs are psychosocial, neurobiological, medical, or otherwise. Ultimately, I argue that this approach prepares psychiatrists to respond creatively to the complex challenges of mental illness.
Committee: Aaron Friedberg (Committee Co-Chair); James Phelan (Committee Chair)
Subjects: Literature; Medicine; Mental Health; Psychotherapy