• Title/Summary/Keyword: Intersubjectivity

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Study on the Concept of Intersubjectivity in Psychotherapy (심리치료에서 상호주관성 개념의 의미 탐색)

  • Choi, Lee-Seon
    • The Journal of the Korea Contents Association
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    • v.16 no.4
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    • pp.569-581
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    • 2016
  • The purpose of this study is to explore the theoretical research on the tendency of Intersubjectivity. To this end, this paper is how intersubjectivity in psychotherapy was exploring the theoretical concept of the importance. Looking specifically, was undertaken to examine closely divided as follows : first, the concept of and theoretical research on the tendency of Intersubjectivity, and second, the intersubjectivity as development process and the third, attachment and intersubjectivity, fourth, intersubjectivity in Psychotherapy. Through this study, Intersubjectivity, whether how is having an impact in the human development, how it can be applied in the psychotherapy field, could be utilized to provide a rationale and its theoretical basis.

Differences in Intersubjectivity During Joint Story Making Activity by Closeness of Peer Relationship (유아의 또래 친밀도에 따른 상호주관성의 차이 : 글 없는 그림책 이야기 꾸미기를 중심으로)

  • Kim, Hyojin;Kwon, Myn-gyun
    • Korean Journal of Child Studies
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    • v.28 no.4
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    • pp.19-33
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    • 2007
  • This study examined the effects of closeness of peer relationships on intersubjectivity in young children's joint story making of wordless picture books. The joint story making activity of 32 five-year-old children was videotaped and transcribed, and the structure and negotiation types of interaction were examined by Goncu's (1993a) measure of intersubjectivity. Results showed (1) closeness of peer relationship was related to the structure of intersubjectivity children working with very close peers exhibited more turns. (2) Children working with very close peers used more extension and acceptance negotiation types, whereas the children working with non-close peers used more building-on of own ideas and irrelevant acts of negotiation.

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Children's Intersubjectivity in Social Dramatic Play: Relationships to Play Role Types and Peer Competence (사회극 극놀이에 나타나는 유아의 상호주관성과 역할유형 및 또래간 유능성간의 관계)

  • Kim, Hyun Ju;Kim, Hee jin
    • Korean Journal of Child Studies
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    • v.21 no.1
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    • pp.253-268
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    • 2000
  • The social dramatic play of seventeen five-year-old children was videotaped and transcribed for analysis of Intersubjectivity and play role types. The teachers of the children rated children's social competence. Results showed that children's Intersubjectivity in social dramatic play was related to their play role types and peer competence. Children with a high level of Intersubjectivity play leading roles during social dramatic play and were rated as socially competent by their teachers. The results were discussed from the Vygotskian perspective. Implications for early childhood teachers and suggestions for future studies were provided.

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The Effect of a Theme-Relevant Dramatic Play Center on Children's Play and Intersubjectivity (주제와 통합된 극놀이 영역이 유아의 놀이행동 및 상호주관성에 미치는 영향)

  • Ohm, Jung Ae;Lee, Eun Wha
    • Korean Journal of Child Studies
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    • v.19 no.2
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    • pp.173-184
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    • 1998
  • The present study investigated the effects of a theme-relevant play center on children's play behavior and intersubjectivity with an integrated approach to early childhood education. The subjects were 24 kindergarten children (12 boys and 12 girls). Half of the experimental subjects participated in a novel dramatic play center connected with a specific theme for the duration of 5 weeks. pre- and post-testing was conducted for all children. The theme-relevant dramatic play center wits an integrated approach to early education facilitated a high level of play behavior and children's intersubjectivity.

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Beyond Factual Knowledge and Symbolic Competence: Interculturality as Transcultural Intersubjectivity

  • Omengele, Theophile Ambadiang
    • Cross-Cultural Studies
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    • v.20
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    • pp.295-321
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    • 2010
  • The trend of globalization has sharpened the debate on interculturality, which scholars examine from different and often conflicting points of view ('content' vs. 'practice', 'culture-specific' vs. 'universal', 'communication (meta)theory' vs. 'communication practice', 'individual' vs. 'collective', etc.). Whereas all these approaches are necessary to describe the multiple dimensions of interculturality, their dichotomous nature does not help to account for its internal complexity, which cannot be dissociated from the connections that exist among all these dimensions. The difficulty posed by the essentialist interpretations that tend to result from these dichotomies is compounded by the fact that in postmodern debates priority has been given to approaches that emphasize individual or collective agency over structural constraints which have to do with political economy or with cultural and linguistic codes and traditions. This paper aims mainly at suggesting that the dissolution of the boundaries that exist between these approaches should be pursued in order to get a fuller and richer approach to their common object of study. After discussing, by way of illustration, content-based and practice-based perspectives, we suggest that one way of getting beyond these dichotomies consists in focusing on the 'interactional' dimension of interculturality, which means laying emphasis on intersubjectivity and, particularly, on the individual subjects considered as members of different cultural communities who strive to transcend their sociocultural boundaries in order to reach harmonious interactions in a world in which inequality and the de-territorialization of people and cultures are central features.

The Concept of Synchronization in the Process of Separation-Individuation Between a Parent and an Adolescent

  • Moon, Duk-Soo;Bahn, Geon Ho
    • Journal of the Korean Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
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    • v.33 no.2
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    • pp.41-47
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    • 2022
  • Objectives: Humans experience the process of separating-individuating themselves from an object via the conflict between dependence and independence within the self. The separation-individuation theory focuses on the psychological process of individualizing oneself. Although adolescents' individuation from their parents is based on intrapsychic events, there is an increasing need for an intersubjective understanding of it. We applied intersubjectivity to adolescents and parents to interpret and find solutions for problems arising during their individuation process. Methods: This study retrospectively reviewed a case of a son and his father treated by the author. From the study subject, contents that represent adolescents and parents' interaction and separation in the individualization process were extracted and analyzed, and their experiences shared in this process were reconstructed from the therapist's perspective. Results: From the case involving an adolescent boy with conduct problems and his interactions with his father, the authors observed the phenomenon of intersubjectivity and proposed the concept of "synchronized individuation" between adolescents and parents. As adolescents rapidly grow and change, they experience various dynamic interactions with their parents. Through learning to tolerate the conflicts and ambivalent tension inherent in this individuation process, adolescents and their parents develop their new identity. Conclusion: "Synchronized individuation" should be understood as complementary to, rather than exclusive from, the existing concept of the separation and individuation. It offers a new paradigm with which to understand adolescent-parent conflicts in the process of separation-individuation.

Henry James's The Wings of the Dove: Free Self and Identity (헨리 제임스의 『비둘기의 날개』 : 자유와 정체성의 문제)

  • Kim, Kyung-ah
    • English & American cultural studies
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    • v.9 no.1
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    • pp.27-50
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    • 2009
  • Henry James tries to describe minutely in The Wings of the Dove the process in which a bad faith grows, is practiced in one's self, and spreads to a society. Through this fictional specificity, he embodies an analogy between a bad faith and social role-playing. That is, he shows, through the main characters such as Milly Theale and Merton Densher, how self interacts with the other and a society. In this interaction, there is some essential element, namely, an organic relationship between a self identity and a social role-model, which James describes very meticulously. Therefore, the characters are depicted as seeking to define self identity and eventually distorting it. Thus, The Wings of the Dove can be seen as a tragedy in which the characters who have this wrongly distorted self identity come to experience its effects. The distorted self identity appears to function as a social role. Milly distorts her true self identity by internalizing a dove-image for it. This results in a bad faith. Moreover, the American girl Milly utilizes it as a convenient social role-model which makes it easy for her to interact and engage with the others in the European society. Merton also evades adventurous and painful self-reflection and self-criticism by sticking to the mannerisms of gentlemanship and imitates the sublimity which Milly shows him. Thus, Milly and Merton clearly omit self-inspection and self-inquiry for the contact between a free self and a society, which is essential to obtain social objectivity, namely, intersubjectivity.

Application Study of Symptoms Weight For Standard of Korean Medicine Pattern Identification In Stroke (중풍 한의변증 표준화를 위한 증상의 중요도 적용 연구)

  • Go, Ho-Yeon;Kang, Byung-Gab;Kim, Bo-Young;Kang, Kyung-Won;Go, Mi-Mi;Park, Sae-Wook;Cha, Min-Ho;Kang, Bong-Ju;Bang, Ok-Sun;Yu, Byung-Chan;Choi, Sun-Mi
    • Journal of Physiology & Pathology in Korean Medicine
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    • v.21 no.4
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    • pp.1051-1055
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    • 2007
  • The diagnosis of pattern identification in Korean Medicine depend on Korean Medicine doctor's experience and information. So, Pattern identification in Korean Medicine raise a question of objectification. This study is to standard stroke pattern identification in Korean Medicine. Weight of symptoms was given important(1points), very important(2points) by stroke specialist. So weight of symptoms is used two method. One is total sum and the other is total man. One had been compared Pattern identification between diagnosed patients by medical specialists and by applicated weight in case report form. The other had been compared Pattern identification between intersubjectivity by medical specialists and by applicated weight in case report form. It is 38%(total sum) or 40%(total man) concordance rate between diagnosed patients by medical specialists and by applicated weight in case report form. It is 82.4% concordance rate between intersubjectivity by medical specialists and by applicated weight in case report form. To acquire more concrete data on this theme, we need further and large scale of prospective researches.

Exploring the Nature of Caring in Hwa-Byung - Transpersonal Caring-Healing Model - (화병에서의 돌봄의 본질 -Transpersonal Caring-Healing Model을 중심으로-)

  • Khim Soon-Yong;Lee Cho-Sik;Kong Byung-Hye;Shin Joo-Young
    • Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing
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    • v.35 no.2
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    • pp.225-238
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    • 2005
  • Hwa-Byung(HB) has been categorized as a Korean culture-bound syndrome that is prevalent in married women of low socioeconomic status. Purpose: The Purpose of the study was to search for the essence of HB and a caring-healing process of HB. Then the research result discusses whether the Transpersonal Caring-Healing Model has been congruent with it. Method: Case examples resulted from in-depth telephone counseling over a period of time at the Women's Hot Line with a client who is a housewife with HB. The counseling content was analyzed through Giorgi's method of descriptive phenomenology. Result: The core meaning of the essence of HB was 'injustice'; and essential themes were 'lack of reciprocity', 'infidelity' 'suppressed aggression and powerlessness' and 'need for recognition'. The core meaning of the essence of the caring-healing process was 'caring-healing experience(maintaining a trust relationship)'; and essential themes were 'active listening', 'empathy' and 'forming a therapeutic relationship'. According to Watson, 'active listening', 'empathy' and 'forming a therapeutic relationship' were identified as intentionality, intersubjectivity and transpersonal. Conclusion: Transpersonal caring can release inner power and strength and help the person to gain a sense of inner harmony. Transpersonal caring is as important to healing as are conventional treatment approaches and even more powerful in the long run.

Integrative Home Economics Curriculum Development from a Critical Science Perspective through Deliberation (숙의를 통한 비판과학 관점의 통합 지향적 가정교과 교육과정 개발)

  • Ju, Sueun;Yoo, Taemyung
    • Human Ecology Research
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    • v.53 no.4
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    • pp.447-461
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    • 2015
  • This study developed an integrative curriculum design plan for Home Economics through a deliberation method. This study established a research framework to integrate the deliberation models of Schwab, Walker, and Reid that inherited the intellectual tradition of curriculum deliberation along with the practical reasoning process of Brown and Paolucci from a critical science perspective. The practical research problem was formulated as "What should be done to develop a Home Economics integrative curriculum?" To address this practical research problem, deliberation with deliberators of each small, medium, and large groups was processed for the development of integrative curriculum design plans. An initial proposal was developed from small group deliberation processes. An initial proposal was examined and an alternative plan was developed from medium group deliberation processes. An alternative plan and its consequence were re-examined from large group deliberation processes. The authors finalized a proposal organized on four valued ends of self-formation, intersubjectivity, social action, and life skills. A practical problem focused integrative curriculum was developed and proposed to pursue the four valued ends. The suggested final practical problem focused curriculum demonstrates the power of Home Economics to contribute to the advancement of individuals, families, and society as well as the practical empowerment of students.