Healing and the invention of metaphor: The effectiveness of symbols revisited
- 1 June 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry
- Vol. 17 (2) , 161-195
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf01379325
Abstract
In this essay, I argue that a theory of meaning adequate to account for the effectiveness of symbolic healing and psychotherapy requires some variant of the three concepts of myth, metaphor and archetype. Myth stands for the overarching narrative structures of the self produced and lent authority by cultural tradition. Archetype stands not for preformed ideas or images, but for the bodily-given in meaning. Metaphor occupies an intermediate realm, linking narrative and bodily-given experience through imaginative constructions and enactments that allow movement in sensory-affective quality space. This pluralistic perspective itself constitutes a middle-ground between constructivist and realist approaches to meaning that can integrate causal and interpretive models of symbolic healing.Keywords
This publication has 42 references indexed in Scilit:
- Consciousness ExplainedThe American Journal of Psychology, 1993
- Social Constructions of HypnosisInternational Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, 1992
- Myth and Metaphor: Selected Essays 1974-1988World Literature Today, 1991
- Symmetry and Entropy: Mathematical Metaphors in the Work of Levi-Strauss [and Comments and Reply]Current Anthropology, 1990
- Embodiment as a Paradigm for AnthropologyEthos, 1990
- Unpacking the Demoralization ThesisMedical Anthropology Quarterly, 1988
- Rhetoric as remedy: Some philosophical antecedents of psychotherapeutic ethicsPsychology and Psychotherapy: Theory, Research and Practice, 1987
- Closure as Cure: Tropes in the Exploration of Bodily and Social Disorder [and Comments and Replies]Current Anthropology, 1986
- Narrative Truth and Historical Truth: Meaning and Interpretation in PsychoanalysisPolitical Psychology, 1983
- Structural AnthropologyBritish Journal of Sociology, 1965