Subjectivity as Critique

Kollektive Methodologie in Phänomenologie und Kritischer Psychologie

Authors

  • Sofie Boldsen
  • Niklas A. Chimirri

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.30820/0942-2285-2023-1-194

Keywords:

phenomenological psychology, critical psychology, qualitative methods, critical phenomenology, autism, early childhood

Abstract

Recently, the notion of critical phenomenology has gained momentum in philosophical scholarship. Yet, in psychological research, phenomenology’s critical resources remain underdeveloped. In this article, we investigate the critical potential of phenomenological psychology by exploring how phenomenology has been an overlooked source of inspiration for the development of critical psychology. We argue that the phenomenological emphasis on the interrelatedness of subjectivity, intersubjectivity, and lifeworld enables a little acknowledged critical reflection on the role of societal-historical development in shaping subjective experience. Retracing the notion of Je-Meinigkeit through Klaus Holzkamp’s »phenomenological turn,« we find a basis for considering the dialogical processes of qualitative inquiry and recognizing phenomenology as a collective methodology. Finally, we develop these points in an empirical context by discussing two research projects that actualize the critical potential of phenomenology through collective research processes with young children and autistic persons respectively, each of whom remain marginalized in processes of knowledge production and societal development.

Author Biographies

Sofie Boldsen

Sofie Boldsen holds a PhD in psychology and an interdisciplinary master’s degree in philosophy and psychology from Roskilde University, Denmark. Currently, she is a postdoctoral researcher at the Center for Phenomenological Psychology and Aesthetics, University of Copenhagen. Her research focuses on phenomenological methodology in the fields of psychology and psychopathology with a particular emphasis on embodiment, perception, and intersubjectivity in autism.

Niklas A. Chimirri

Niklas A. Chimirri is Associate Professor in Social Psychology of Everyday Life at Roskilde University, Denmark. Both his teaching and research explore the relevance of communication technology for children’s and adults’ conduct of everyday life, with a focus on technology’s ethical implications for designing collaborative research across age-related thresholds and in dialogue with the more-than-human world. The aim is to develop a praxis-philosophical, socio-material psychology of everyday life that interrelates audience research, participatory design studies, the environmental humanities, and transgenerational childhood research.
194-220 34100

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How to Cite

Boldsen, Sofie, and Niklas A. Chimirri. 2023. “Subjectivity As Critique: Kollektive Methodologie in Phänomenologie Und Kritischer Psychologie”. Journal für Psychologie 31 (1):194-220. https://doi.org/10.30820/0942-2285-2023-1-194.