Zeitschrift | Band | Artikel
Self-stigma, bad faith and the experiential self
pp. 391-405
Abstrakt
The concept of self-stigmatization is guided by a representational account of selfhood that fails to accommodate for resilience against, and recovery from, stigma. Mainstream research on self-stigma has portrayed it only as a reified self, that is, as collectively shared stereotypes representing individuals' identity. Self-stigma viewed phenomenologically, however, elucidates what facilitates a stigmatized self. A phenomenological analysis discloses the lived phenomenon of stigma as an act of self-objectification, as related to the experiential self, and therefore an achievement of subjectivity. Following a phenomenological account, the stigmatized self can thus return to a state-of-being, similar to that Jean-Paul Sartre once referred to as bad faith. Regarding your identity as analogous to an inanimate thing is ultimately self-deceptive. Self-stigma is here phenomenologically illuminated as constituted by basic discretion, that is, as a minimal form of agency. The study found that basic discretion can uphold the possibility for emancipation from a stigmatized self.
Publication details
Published in:
(2019) Human Studies 42 (3).
Seiten: 391-405
DOI: 10.1007/s10746-019-09504-8
Referenz:
Eriksson Karl (2019) „Self-stigma, bad faith and the experiential self“. Human Studies 42 (3), 391–405.