scholarly journals BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER IN DRAMA AUGUST: OSAGE COUNTY (2007) BY TRACY LETTS

2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Dova Yovenescha ◽  
Desvalini Anwar

The purpose of this analysis is to expose the issue of Borderline Personality Disordere which is represented by the main character and to know the contribution of the plot, setting, and character in revealing the Borderline Personality Disorder. This analysis is related to the concept neurosis by Freud that is supported by the text-based interpretation. The result of this analysis shows the main character has Borderline Personality Disorder that can be seen from the main character’s inappropriate emotional reactions and highly self-destructive behaviors.

2009 ◽  
Vol 197 (11) ◽  
pp. 808-815 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gitta A. Jacob ◽  
Kathrin Hellstern ◽  
Nicole Ower ◽  
Mona Pillmann ◽  
Corinna N. Scheel ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 33 (2) ◽  
pp. 249-261 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katharina Kolbeck ◽  
Steffen Moritz ◽  
Julia Bierbrodt ◽  
Christina Andreou

Ongoing research is shifting towards a dimensional understanding of borderline personality disorder (BPD). Aim of this study was to identify personality profiles in BPD that are predictive of self-destructive behaviors. Personality traits were assessed (n = 130) according to the five-factor model of personality (i.e., Neuroticism, Extraversion, Openness to Experience, Agreeableness, Conscientiousness) and an additional factor called Risk Preference. Self-destructive behavior parameters such as non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) and other borderline typical dyscontrolled behaviors (e.g., drug abuse) were assessed by self-report measures. Canonical correlation analyses demonstrated that Neuroticism, Extraversion, and Conscientiousness are predictors of NSSI. Further, Neuroticism, Agreeableness, and Risk Preference were associated with dyscontrolled behaviors. Our results add further support on personality-relevant self-destructive behaviors in BPD. A combined diagnostic assessment could offer clinically meaningful insights about the causes of self-destruction in BPD to expand current therapeutic repertoires.


2011 ◽  
Vol 41 (9) ◽  
pp. 1929-1938 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Staebler ◽  
B. Renneberg ◽  
M. Stopsack ◽  
P. Fiedler ◽  
M. Weiler ◽  
...  

BackgroundDisturbances in social interaction are a defining feature of patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD). In this study, facial emotional expressions, which are crucial for adaptive interactions in social contexts, were assessed in patients with BPD in response to social exclusion.MethodWe examined facial emotional reactions of 35 patients with BPD and 33 healthy controls when playing Cyberball, a virtual ball-tossing game that reliably induces social exclusion. Besides self-reported emotional responses, facial emotional expressions were analyzed by applying the Emotional Facial Action Coding System (EMFACS).ResultsPatients with BPD showed a biased perception of participation. They more readily reported feeling excluded compared to controls even when they were included. In BPD, social exclusion led to an increase in self-reported other-focused negative emotions. Overall, EMFACS analyses revealed that BPD patients reacted with fewer positive expressions and with significantly more mixed emotional expressions (two emotional facial expressions at the same time) compared to the healthy control group when excluded.ConclusionsBesides a negative bias for perceived social participation, ambiguous facial emotional expressions may play an important role in the disturbed relatedness in patients with BPD.


2020 ◽  
Vol 26 (02) ◽  
pp. 406-430
Author(s):  
Abdur Rahman ◽  
Ulfatmi Azlan ◽  
Firdiansyah Firdiansyah

This research discusses personality disorder as seen in main character in the movie Joker. Personality disorder can be recognized in adolescence because the structure of disfunctional characteristics at that stage is similar to the structure of personality disorder in adulthood (Westen et al. 2003). Biological and psychological considerations, personality disorder develop in a socio structural context and appear to be socially sensitive. Through this movie, it can be concluded that there are five kinds of personality disorder reflected to the Joker as the main character in Joker movie by Todd phillips, they are borderline personality disorder, depressive personality disorder, sadistic personality disorder, antisocial personality disorder, and negativistic personality disorder. There are two causes of personality disorder that influence Joker as the main character they are psychological factors and environmental factors.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Zeno Van Duppen ◽  
Philipp Schmidt ◽  
Benedicte Lowyck

Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a severe psychiatric condition characterized by instability in identity, relationships, and affect. Individuals, with BPD typically lack a coherent sense of self, are highly sensitive to interpersonal stressors, experience intense fluctuations in mood, and frequently engage in impulsive and self-destructive behaviors. Although both empirical research and development of effective psychotherapy have evidently progressed over the past years, many aspects regarding the structure of experience and the life-world typical for persons with BPD are not yet fully understood. Somewhat surprisingly, phenomenological psychopathology has only recently started to pay more attention to the disorder. A comprehensive elaboration of the phenomenology of BPD is therefore still lacking. This article aimed to contribute to such a phenomenological understanding by focusing on what we think is an essential aspect that has yet not been sufficiently addressed: the background of safety. To clarify what this means, we depart from Sandler’s [<i>Int J Psychoan</i>. 1960;41:352–6] psychoanalytic concept and elaborate on it phenomenologically. This leads us to argue that the development of a background of safety requires a particular embodied presence of others, which, in turn, contributes to the constitution of a safe we-space, a shared and familiar environment providing a matrix for the experience of a stable world. However, even when established, the background of safety remains in need of a continuous reconfirmation through corresponding experiences within a sufficiently reliable and controllable environment. The background of safety is vulnerable and open to (interpersonal) disruptions like trauma or neglect. In BPD, we suggest 3 aspects regarding the phenomenology of the background of the safety need to be considered: first, typically, patients with BPD did not develop a robust background of safety in infancy; second, weakening of the background of safety gives rise to symptoms and dynamics typical for BPD; third, these symptoms and dynamics further undermine the possible development of a background of safety in adult life and thus gravitate toward a petrification of the borderline condition, a “stable instability.” To conclude, we examine whether this concept should be understood as a <i>trouble générateur</i> and, last, consider its clinical implications.


Author(s):  
Lucene Wisniewski ◽  
Leslie K. Anderson

Individuals with eating disorders (EDs) tend to have elevated rates of comorbid borderline personality disorder (BPD). A number of studies have found that individuals with both ED and BPD present with a more complicated clinical picture compared to individuals with ED alone, both in terms of eating pathology and in terms of more severe problems with depression, anxiety, impulse control, and affect dysregulation. Therapists are often faced with clinical dilemmas with regard to limiting therapy-interfering behaviors and attending to health-threatening or self-destructive behaviors without reinforcing them while ensuring that these behaviors do not supersede the therapeutic focus on ED symptoms, potentially reinforcing self-destructive behaviors. This chapter offers guidelines for responding to therapy-interfering behaviors in this population from the perspective of dialectical behavior therapy, with a case example to illustrate these principles.


2011 ◽  
Vol 26 (S2) ◽  
pp. 1316-1316
Author(s):  
D. Jelenova ◽  
A. Kovacsova ◽  
T. Diveky ◽  
D. Kamaradova ◽  
J. Prasko ◽  
...  

In many patients cognitive reconstruction helps to understand their problems in life and symptoms of stress or psychiatric disorders. Change in the thoughts and beliefs help them to feel better. But there are many patients who suffer with strong traumatic experiences deep in their mind and typically dissociate them or want to avoid them voluntarily. There is typical for patients suffering with dissociative disorders, borderline personality disorder and many people with various psychiatric disorders who were abused in childhood. The processing of the traumatic emotions from childhood can be helpful in the treatment of these patients. For the help is important:a) Understanding what was happen in childhoodb) Making clear of repeated figures of maladaptive behaviors, mostly in interpersonal relationsc) Making a connection between childhood experiences and here and now emotional reactions on various triggersd) Experiencing repeatedly the traumatic memories and elaborate them with imaginal coping.We describe:- how to map and elaborate emotional schemas- Socratic questioning with the patients with traumatic memories- how to work with traumatic experiences from childhood in borderline personality disorder.Supported by the research grant IGA MZ CR NS 10301-3/2009


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Adina Isabell Iancu ◽  
◽  
Monica-Georgiana Lazăr ◽  
Simona Trifu ◽  
◽  
...  

This paper aims to evaluate the current and dynamic profile of a 19-year-old with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) with paranoid features. The case allows us to detect how the symptoms associated with BPD evolve on a background of poor management of potentially stressful events. There is a Borderline personality structure with obvious paranoid features, which pushes the patient into dysfunctional behaviors, aggressive acts and suicidal tendencies, the patient's instability, chaotic sexuality, addictive and self-harming behavior being observed. There are elements specific to an antisocial personality with narcissistic notes, which highlight impulsive and manipulative tendencies, accompanied by recurrent conflicts and delinquency. The clinical picture of axis II pathology is highlighted, an accentuated aspect being represented by the deficient defense mechanisms, which prevent the integration of the events in an adequate way. Considering the patient's self-destructive behaviors, impulsiveness, and multiple addictions, in the absence of appropriate treatment, psychotherapy, and/or pharmacological treatment, several future complications may occur, including risks of future problems with the law, self-destructive behaviors, and suicide attempts.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adina Isabell Iancu ◽  
Monica-Georgiana Lazăr ◽  
Simona Trifu

This paper aims to evaluate the current and dynamic profile of a 19-year-old with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) with paranoid features. The case allows us to detect how the symptoms associated with BPD evolve on a background of poor management of potentially stressful events. There is a Borderline personality structure with obvious paranoid features, which pushes the patient into dysfunctional behaviors, aggressive acts and suicidal tendencies, the patient's instability, chaotic sexuality, addictive and self-harming behavior being observed. There are elements specific to an antisocial personality with narcissistic notes, which highlight impulsive and manipulative tendencies, accompanied by recurrent conflicts and delinquency. The clinical picture of axis II pathology is highlighted, an accentuated aspect being represented by the deficient defense mechanisms, which prevent the integration of the events in an adequate way. Considering the patient's self-destructive behaviors, impulsiveness, and multiple addictions, in the absence of appropriate treatment, psychotherapy, and/or pharmacological treatment, several future complications may occur, including risks of future problems with the law, self-destructive behaviors, and suicide attempts.


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