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Theory & Psychology, Vol. 18, No. 3, 404-422 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/0959354308089792

Identity as Self-Interpretation

Svend Brinkmann

UNIVERSITY OF AARHUS, svendb{at}psy.au.dk

The hermeneutic tradition in psychology and the social sciences claims that we should understand human identity in terms of self-interpretation. This article is an attempt to spell out what it means to think of identity as self-interpretation. First, two dimensions of identity as self-interpretation are outlined: that we can only have an identity if we are committed to issues of moral worth; and that self-interpretation involves a temporal dimension that has a narrative form. Second, I outline four levels of self-interpretation in order to show that identity is not confined to either social or mental representations, but is dispersed across bodies, persons, practices, and society. Often there are discrepancies and conflicts between levels of self-interpretation, which can lead to social progress but also to social pathologies. Finally, I analyse some pathological aspects of a dominating Western self-interpretation in the current consumer society, which frames identity formation in terms of self-realization.

Key Words: consumer society • hermeneutics • identity • self-interpretation • self-realization • social imaginary • social pathologies • Taylor


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