THE LIFE OF OLIVE SCHREINER: A PSYCHOBIOGRAPHY

Olive Schreiner (1855-1920) was a famous South African novelist and humanitarian. A remarkable and enigmatic woman, her life and work have inspired a substantial amount of research by Schreiner scholars representing a diversity of academic disciplines. They continue to speculate about the extent of...

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Main Author: Perry, Mark James
Other Authors: Dr SP Walker
Format: Others
Language:en-uk
Published: University of the Free State 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://etd.uovs.ac.za//theses/available/etd-05272013-115722/restricted/
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topic Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Faculty of Humanities
Perry, Mark James
THE LIFE OF OLIVE SCHREINER: A PSYCHOBIOGRAPHY
description Olive Schreiner (1855-1920) was a famous South African novelist and humanitarian. A remarkable and enigmatic woman, her life and work have inspired a substantial amount of research by Schreiner scholars representing a diversity of academic disciplines. They continue to speculate about the extent of her contribution to society, the degree to which she realised her potential as a writer and the nature of her psychological disturbance. Olive was chosen as the subject of this research because she was so interesting, complex and controversial. She has been the subject of numerous biographies. All have offered interpretations of her life and some have employed formal theories of psychology to do so. None has utilised explicit or established psychological research designs and methodologies. The aim of this study was to conceptualise Oliveâs life in terms of the principles of Individual Psychology, thereby providing an illuminating account of her life and offering explanations of her creativity, altruism, psychological difficulties and general personality development. Individual Psychology is the theory developed by Alfred Adler (1870-1937). It is a holistic theory, emphasising subjectivism and the creative roles of individuals in developing their lifestyles. Adlerâs work has had a significant influence on psychotherapeutic practice although he has received comparatively little recognition for his contributions to contemporary psychology. The autobiographical nature of the Adlerian concept of lifestyle and the theoryâs focus on the uniqueness of human beings means that it is well suited to the study of individual lives. The study can be described as life history research. It employed a single case, holistic design and entailed a psychobiographical study of a single subject over an entire lifespan. The research was explanatory and the method was qualitative. Two strategies for data extraction and analysis were employed. One entailed the use of theoretical propositions to identify relevant data, and the other involved the development of a descriptive framework for organising the case material. The combination of these strategies enabled the researcher to obtain evidence for key theoretical constructs throughout Oliveâs life. This type of psychobiographical research is useful in understanding rare or unique phenomena and its application to the lives of enigmatic individuals facilitates theory development and testing. The researcher concluded that Individual Psychology was well suited to conceptualising Oliveâs life, and that it offered a plausible and coherent explanation of her moral development, creativity and her psychological distress. Oliveâs lifestyle, in accordance with the tenets of Individual Psychology, was understood to be motivated by a deep sense of inferiority which she spent her life striving to overcome. To this end, and in an attempt to protect her fragile sense of self-worth, she employed particular symptoms. Most obvious were her attempts at safeguarding her self-esteem by distancing herself from lifeâs challenges. In many respects she displayed evidence of the Adlerian concept social interest, or a commitment to the welfare of others. The study of Oliveâs personality provided a positive demonstration of the value of Adlerâs theory. The validity of the construct social interest as the primary indicator of mental health was questioned. Suggestions for further research were made.
author2 Dr SP Walker
author_facet Dr SP Walker
Perry, Mark James
author Perry, Mark James
author_sort Perry, Mark James
title THE LIFE OF OLIVE SCHREINER: A PSYCHOBIOGRAPHY
title_short THE LIFE OF OLIVE SCHREINER: A PSYCHOBIOGRAPHY
title_full THE LIFE OF OLIVE SCHREINER: A PSYCHOBIOGRAPHY
title_fullStr THE LIFE OF OLIVE SCHREINER: A PSYCHOBIOGRAPHY
title_full_unstemmed THE LIFE OF OLIVE SCHREINER: A PSYCHOBIOGRAPHY
title_sort life of olive schreiner: a psychobiography
publisher University of the Free State
publishDate 2013
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-ufs-oai-etd.uovs.ac.za-etd-05272013-1157222014-02-08T03:46:21Z THE LIFE OF OLIVE SCHREINER: A PSYCHOBIOGRAPHY Perry, Mark James Faculty of Humanities Olive Schreiner (1855-1920) was a famous South African novelist and humanitarian. A remarkable and enigmatic woman, her life and work have inspired a substantial amount of research by Schreiner scholars representing a diversity of academic disciplines. They continue to speculate about the extent of her contribution to society, the degree to which she realised her potential as a writer and the nature of her psychological disturbance. Olive was chosen as the subject of this research because she was so interesting, complex and controversial. She has been the subject of numerous biographies. All have offered interpretations of her life and some have employed formal theories of psychology to do so. None has utilised explicit or established psychological research designs and methodologies. The aim of this study was to conceptualise Oliveâs life in terms of the principles of Individual Psychology, thereby providing an illuminating account of her life and offering explanations of her creativity, altruism, psychological difficulties and general personality development. Individual Psychology is the theory developed by Alfred Adler (1870-1937). It is a holistic theory, emphasising subjectivism and the creative roles of individuals in developing their lifestyles. Adlerâs work has had a significant influence on psychotherapeutic practice although he has received comparatively little recognition for his contributions to contemporary psychology. The autobiographical nature of the Adlerian concept of lifestyle and the theoryâs focus on the uniqueness of human beings means that it is well suited to the study of individual lives. The study can be described as life history research. It employed a single case, holistic design and entailed a psychobiographical study of a single subject over an entire lifespan. The research was explanatory and the method was qualitative. Two strategies for data extraction and analysis were employed. One entailed the use of theoretical propositions to identify relevant data, and the other involved the development of a descriptive framework for organising the case material. The combination of these strategies enabled the researcher to obtain evidence for key theoretical constructs throughout Oliveâs life. This type of psychobiographical research is useful in understanding rare or unique phenomena and its application to the lives of enigmatic individuals facilitates theory development and testing. The researcher concluded that Individual Psychology was well suited to conceptualising Oliveâs life, and that it offered a plausible and coherent explanation of her moral development, creativity and her psychological distress. Oliveâs lifestyle, in accordance with the tenets of Individual Psychology, was understood to be motivated by a deep sense of inferiority which she spent her life striving to overcome. To this end, and in an attempt to protect her fragile sense of self-worth, she employed particular symptoms. Most obvious were her attempts at safeguarding her self-esteem by distancing herself from lifeâs challenges. In many respects she displayed evidence of the Adlerian concept social interest, or a commitment to the welfare of others. The study of Oliveâs personality provided a positive demonstration of the value of Adlerâs theory. The validity of the construct social interest as the primary indicator of mental health was questioned. Suggestions for further research were made. Dr SP Walker Prof JP Fouché Prof R van Niekerk University of the Free State 2013-05-27 text application/pdf http://etd.uovs.ac.za//theses/available/etd-05272013-115722/restricted/ http://etd.uovs.ac.za//theses/available/etd-05272013-115722/restricted/ en-uk unrestricted I hereby certify that, if appropriate, I have obtained and attached hereto a written permission statement from the owner(s) of each third party copyrighted matter to be included in my thesis, dissertation, or project report, allowing distribution as specified below. I certify that the version I submitted is the same as that approved by my advisory committee. I hereby grant to University Free State or its agents the non-exclusive license to archive and make accessible, under the conditions specified below, my thesis, dissertation, or project report in whole or in part in all forms of media, now or hereafter known. I retain all other ownership rights to the copyright of the thesis, dissertation or project report. I also retain the right to use in future works (such as articles or books) all or part of this thesis, dissertation, or project report.