Psychol Trauma. 2025 Dec 8. doi: 10.1037/tra0002095. Online ahead of print.
OBJECTIVE: Grounded in a phenomenology framework, this qualitative case study interrogates the structural embedding of childhood trauma within the linguistic and phenomenological aspects of schizophrenia. It posits that traumatic experiences are not merely reflected in but actively reorganize communicative patterns, becoming grammatically and narratively encoded in psychotic discourse.
METHOD: A multilevel discourse analysis was applied to verbatim transcripts from two historical, publicly available recordings of a clinically diagnosed male patient: a structured clinical interview and an unstructured home visit. Employing a triangulation design, the analysis integrated patient narrative, clinician assessments, and familial observations. Coding was conducted through an iterative, deductive-inductive process focused on linguistic strata: syntactic structure, lexical semantics, narrative coherence, and dialogical dynamics.
RESULTS: The analysis delineated a distinct psycholinguistic configuration indicative of trauma reorganization. Dominant themes include the following: (a) syntactic reenactment-rigid, persecutory interrogatives fossilizing victim-perpetrator frameworks; (b) lexical hypervigilance-a semantically constrained lexicon centered on violation and somatic threat; (c) narrative dissociation-abrupt thematic shifts and displaced trauma disclosures that disrupt autobiographical coherence; and (d) dialogical rupture-interlocutor-specific speech patterns reenacting attachment conflicts. These markers form a coherent, trauma-organized communicative system persistent across contexts.
CONCLUSIONS: Trauma in schizophrenia may operate as a structural determinant of communication, not a comorbid overlay. Personalized, linguistically informed, trauma-focused interventions may reduce the accompanying interpersonal distress. We provide an outline for studying discursive markers to investigate therapies targeting trauma-derived syntactic and narrative frameworks. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
PubMed:41359582 | DOI:10.1037/tra0002095
