La mente in chiaroscuro. Note per una definizione delle psychological humanities

Autori

  • Maria Micaela Coppola Università di Trento

Abstract

This paper aims at providing a first definition of psychological humanities, by which I indicate an interdisciplinary approach that interpolates psychological and empirical sciences with humanities, social sciences and the arts, carrying out integrated analyses of the luminous as well as the obscure aspects of the mind. In order to exemplify the perspective of psychological humanities, we highlight the paradoxical and only partially dichotomous connection of psychology (in all its declinations) with the humanities, as far as language and research methods on the chiaroscuros of the mind are concerned.
Moreover, drawing from the wide range of metaphors, images and discourses that link reasoning to transparency and lucidity, and mental illness to darkness and obscurity, we will see how these relations can be reversed in both scientific and literary discourses, and, as a consequence, how the concepts of transparency-obscurity and of health-illness are described in contradictory ways.
Then, in order to further exemplify the conceptualisation of the chiaroscuro mind in psychological humanities, we will focus on passages from John Bayley’s Iris: A Memoir of Iris Murdoch (1998) and Jonathan Franzen’s “My Father’s Brain” (2002), where two opposing mappings of the brain are represented: the medical-scientific brain scans (which seek clarity and objectivity, and imply clinical distance) are opposed to and integrated with narrative brain scans (which linger on obscurity and intersubjectivity, and imply empathy). From their intersection, a chiaroscuro map of the mind is drawn, which is the focal point around which the psychological humanities can be developed.

Biografia autore

Maria Micaela Coppola, Università di Trento

Maria Micaela Coppola è professoressa associata presso il Dipartimento di Psicologia e Scienze Cognitive dell’Università di Trento. Ha pubblicato su scrittrici in lingua inglese del XX secolo e contemporanee, letteratura lesbica e riviste culturali femministe. Su questo tema è uscito il volume monografico "‘The Im/possible burden of sisterhood’. Donne, femminilità e femminismi", in Spare Rib. A Women’s Liberation Magazine (2012). Attualmente la sua ricerca si focalizza su fiction e rappresentazioni culturali delle malattie da demenza.

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Pubblicato

15-06-2020

Come citare

Coppola, M. M. (2020). La mente in chiaroscuro. Note per una definizione delle psychological humanities. Elephant & Castle, (22). Recuperato da https://elephantandcastle.unibg.it/index.php/eac/article/view/292

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