My Name is Alcoholic and I Am Your Identity| An Exploration of an Individual's Self-Identification Process as an Alcoholic

<p> Identity development and an individual&rsquo;s self-concept can inform how one experiences the world and defines himself/herself. Personal identity can be culturally defined as well as socially developed (Koski-Jannes, 2002). Considering addiction, specifically alcoholism, an individua...

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Main Author: Valencia-Payne, Marisol A.
Language:EN
Published: The Chicago School of Professional Psychology 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10745719
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-107457192018-04-26T16:00:59Z My Name is Alcoholic and I Am Your Identity| An Exploration of an Individual's Self-Identification Process as an Alcoholic Valencia-Payne, Marisol A. Psychology|Clinical psychology <p> Identity development and an individual&rsquo;s self-concept can inform how one experiences the world and defines himself/herself. Personal identity can be culturally defined as well as socially developed (Koski-Jannes, 2002). Considering addiction, specifically alcoholism, an individual&rsquo;s involvement with an arguably deviant category may negatively and/or positively affect his/her identity process (Adler &amp; Adler, 2003) and potential recovery prospects (Koski-Jannes, 2002; Walters, 1996; Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, 2003). Uncovering the individual&rsquo;s experience of his/her own identity transformation can provide a better understanding for potential recovery and treatment modalities that have been unknowingly overlooked. The lived experiences may offer a comprehensive understanding of the challenges involving the alcoholic identity, and illuminate how identity development can embrace or deter one from seeking current treatment strategies and recovery. Thus, gaining direct perspectives of individuals who take on the alcoholic identity can offer clinical implications, inform future theoretical perspectives, and advise current treatment approaches. This qualitative dissertation explores the identification process of self-identified people who live with alcoholism utilizing an in-depth approach into the lived experiences that informed their own understanding of the identity transformation they endured, and the factors that influenced the decision to self-identify.</p><p> The Chicago School of Professional Psychology 2018-04-24 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10745719 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Psychology|Clinical psychology
spellingShingle Psychology|Clinical psychology
Valencia-Payne, Marisol A.
My Name is Alcoholic and I Am Your Identity| An Exploration of an Individual's Self-Identification Process as an Alcoholic
description <p> Identity development and an individual&rsquo;s self-concept can inform how one experiences the world and defines himself/herself. Personal identity can be culturally defined as well as socially developed (Koski-Jannes, 2002). Considering addiction, specifically alcoholism, an individual&rsquo;s involvement with an arguably deviant category may negatively and/or positively affect his/her identity process (Adler &amp; Adler, 2003) and potential recovery prospects (Koski-Jannes, 2002; Walters, 1996; Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, 2003). Uncovering the individual&rsquo;s experience of his/her own identity transformation can provide a better understanding for potential recovery and treatment modalities that have been unknowingly overlooked. The lived experiences may offer a comprehensive understanding of the challenges involving the alcoholic identity, and illuminate how identity development can embrace or deter one from seeking current treatment strategies and recovery. Thus, gaining direct perspectives of individuals who take on the alcoholic identity can offer clinical implications, inform future theoretical perspectives, and advise current treatment approaches. This qualitative dissertation explores the identification process of self-identified people who live with alcoholism utilizing an in-depth approach into the lived experiences that informed their own understanding of the identity transformation they endured, and the factors that influenced the decision to self-identify.</p><p>
author Valencia-Payne, Marisol A.
author_facet Valencia-Payne, Marisol A.
author_sort Valencia-Payne, Marisol A.
title My Name is Alcoholic and I Am Your Identity| An Exploration of an Individual's Self-Identification Process as an Alcoholic
title_short My Name is Alcoholic and I Am Your Identity| An Exploration of an Individual's Self-Identification Process as an Alcoholic
title_full My Name is Alcoholic and I Am Your Identity| An Exploration of an Individual's Self-Identification Process as an Alcoholic
title_fullStr My Name is Alcoholic and I Am Your Identity| An Exploration of an Individual's Self-Identification Process as an Alcoholic
title_full_unstemmed My Name is Alcoholic and I Am Your Identity| An Exploration of an Individual's Self-Identification Process as an Alcoholic
title_sort my name is alcoholic and i am your identity| an exploration of an individual's self-identification process as an alcoholic
publisher The Chicago School of Professional Psychology
publishDate 2018
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10745719
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