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Borderline Personality Disorder, Lived Space, and the Stimmung
Author(s) -
Fabian Lo Monte,
Jérôme Englebert
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
psychopathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.867
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 1423-033X
pISSN - 0254-4962
DOI - 10.1159/000521182
Subject(s) - psychology , borderline personality disorder , immediacy , perspective (graphical) , psychoanalysis , phenomenology (philosophy) , reflexivity , space (punctuation) , cognitive psychology , psychotherapist , epistemology , sociology , philosophy , anthropology , art , linguistics , visual arts
Most articles and theories about borderline personality disorder (BPD), either in the psychoanalytical field or the cognitivist one, explicitly or implicitly inscribe themselves in a topographical framework that either carry a fundamental representational a priori or give prominence to causal explanations. Less is written about the phenomenological everyday life-world of borderline people. This article aims to contribute to the description of such a world. Drawing upon clinical sequences that give prominence to the first-person perspective, we will analyse the experience of some typical “symptoms” of BPD in a phenomenological and topological way. We will be led to conclude that the borderline stimmung seems to display the following characteristics: a pervading immediacy of lived experience, a territorialization that tends towards ubiquity, a certain difficulty to deal with the unity and difference poles, a quite horizontal concern with ecstasy and elation, and a waning of reflexivity in the lived space.

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