‘One time my gut and psyche talked to each other’: The flexible use of mind-body dualism to articulate socially situated selves

Tine Friis, Monica Greco, Louise Whiteley

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Abstract

Instead of pursuing the dissolution of mind-body dualism, this article argues for examining when and to what purposes it is mobilised. The article explores notions of the ‘gut’, ‘psyche’ and ‘self’ as mobilised in descriptions of personal experiences, which were examined through collective memory-work with three groups of women. Rather than responding to direct questions about mind-body dualism, participants wrote memories from the prompt One time my gut and psyche talked to each other. . . Our analysis shows that the memories use ‘gut’ and ‘psyche’ to articulate ‘selves’, and these articulations illuminate and help participants navigate the social situations that structure the experiences they describe. More generally, our memory-work shows that meanings of ‘gut’ and ‘psyche’ – and thus implicit ideas about mind-body dualism – are flexible and unsettled. They find their meaning(s) in the ways their relations are articulated, but also via attributions of agency and responsibility. We argue that this is not as such problematic. Rather, our analysis calls for an orientation towards appreciating, rather than fixing or controlling, this mutability. Our memory-work offers and exemplifies such an orientation, and develops the use of memory prompts that provocatively contain the very categories that are in question, rather than trying to avoid their premature articulation or dissolution.
Original languageEnglish
JournalHealth: An Interdisciplinary Journal for the Social Study of Health, Illness and Medicine
Early online date28 Jul 2025
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 28 Jul 2025

Funding

This work was supported by the VELUX Foundation [grant number 00017008]. LW\u2019s salary was additionally supported by the Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Basic Metabolic Research (CBMR). CBMR is an independent research center at the University of Copenhagen partially funded by an unrestricted donation from the Novo Nordisk Foundation [grant number NNF17OC0028136]. TF\u2019s work on the final stages of the article was additionally supported by the Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Stem Cell Medicine (reNEW; supported by Novo Nordisk Foundation grant NNF21CC0073729).

FundersFunder number
Centro de Investigação em Biomedicina
Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Basic Metabolic Research
Velux Stiftung00017008
Novo Nordisk FondenNNF17OC0028136, NNF21CC0073729

    Keywords

    • chronic illness and disability
    • experiencing illness and narratives
    • gender and health
    • narrative analysis
    • research methodology

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Health(social science)

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