A study of the mind in conflict: A methodological novel exploring radical transformations of consciousness
by Barfield, Jonathan A., Ph.D., INSTITUTE OF TRANSPERSONAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2011, 324 pages; 3432855

Abstract:

This study explored the differences between a culture of hatred and a culture of peace through the transformative stories of 5 primary research participants who discovered peace out of various experiences of hatred, abuse, and aversion. An autoethnographic method was used that recognized the interdependence of subject and object, the primacy of meaning over truth, and the value of artistic, literary work. Themes were identified with a coconstructed, reflexive interview process. The themes were presented as a methodological novel telling the transformative journeys of the research participants with the intention to stimulate an embodied response from readers. Academic interludes provide deeper discussions around the themes through Buddhist philosophies of mind. These common themes include compassion, gratitude, and release of self-fixation. The distinction of cultures of peace and hatred were found insignificant and cultures of captivity and freedom were proposed.

 
AdviserMark McCaslin
SchoolINSTITUTE OF TRANSPERSONAL PSYCHOLOGY
SourceDAI/B 72-02, p. , Jan 2011
Source TypeDissertation
SubjectsSocial psychology; Peace studies; American literature; Psychology
Publication Number3432855
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