Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://evnuir.vnu.edu.ua/handle/123456789/20566
Title: Childhood Trauma in Women and Fragmented Interview Narratives – Some Interdisciplinary Methodological and Clinical Implications
Authors: Bifulco, Antonia
Affiliation: Middlesex University, UK
Bibliographic description (Ukraine): Bifulco, A. Childhood Trauma in Women and Fragmented Interview Narratives – Some Interdisciplinary Methodological and Clinical Implications / A. Bifulco // East European Journal of Psycholinguistics / Lesya Ukrainka Volyn National University. – Lutsk, 2021. – Volume 8, Number 1 – P. 12-27.https://doi.org/10.29038/eejpl.2021.8.1.bif
Journal/Collection: East European Journal of Psycholinguistics
Issue Date: 2021
Date of entry: 9-Jul-2022
Publisher: Lesya Ukrainka Volyn National University
Country (code): UA
Place of the edition/event: East European Journal of Psycholinguistics
DOI: https://doi.org/10.29038/eejpl.2021.8.1.bif
Keywords: CECA interviews
childhood abuse
attachment
unresolved trauma
methods
attachment style
Page range: 12-27
Abstract: Trauma experience is understood through its expression in language, with implications for psycholinguistic and clinical research and analysis. Clinical research approaches often approach childhood trauma through investigative, semi-structured, retrospective interviews (e.g. Childhood Experience of Care and Abuse, CECA). This facilitates the narration of abuse history for systematic analysis in relation to clinical disorder. Interview techniques assist such history-telling, for example by ‘scaffolding’ the account, aiding memory through chronological questioning, using a factual focus and using probing questions to collect detail and resolve inconsistencies. However, some personal narratives are fragmented, incomplete, contradictory or highly emotional/dissociated from emotion. This can be explained by trauma impacts such as being emotionally frozen (forgetting and avoidance) or overwhelmed (emotional over-remembering) and is termed ‘unresolved trauma’ with links to attachment vulnerability. These narratives can make investigative interview research more challenging but can offer opportunities for secondary psycholinguistic analysis. Illustrative interview quotes from CECA childhood physical and sexual abuse narratives of three women are provided with comment on style of reporting. The women had recurrent trauma experience and later life depression and anxiety. The interview responses are examined in terms of seven characteristics taken from available literature (e.g. incoherent, contradictory, lack recall, time lapses, emotionality, blame and vividness). The concept of unresolved loss is discussed and whether the linguistic characteristics are specific to a trauma or to an individual. Factual investigative interviews and psycholinguistic analysis of narrative may find ways of combining for greater depth of understanding of unresolved trauma, to extend available methods and aid therapy.
URI: https://evnuir.vnu.edu.ua/handle/123456789/20566
Copyright owner: East European Journal of Psycholinguistics
Content type: Article
Appears in Collections:East European Journal of Psycholinguistics, 2021, Volume 8, Number 1

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