posted on 2025-08-06, 15:19authored bySarah Goldingay, P Dieppe, M Farias
Three academic/practitioners from different disciplines (performance, medicine and psychology) describe the ways in which observing, and importantly, participating in the healing rituals of the French pilgrimage site of Lourdes challenged their ways of thinking about both their discipline's research approaches and their understandings of community, caring and healing. By positioning themselves as both first-person and third-person researchers, they suggest that a new type of 'trans-disciplinary', longitudinal, reflexively sensitive methodology is needed in order to investigate activities involving groups of people and spiritual practices as a whole system in order to better understand how they can positively affect our innate healing response.
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis Group in International Review of Psychiatry on 22/06/2014, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.3109/09540261.2014.914472