Parkinson, William (2025) “You get me”: a three-paper research project exploring how trainee psychotherapists experience and understand humour in psychoanalytic psychotherapy with young people in the context of professional training programmes. Doctoral thesis, University of Essex & Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust. DOI https://doi.org/10.5526/ERR-00041321
Parkinson, William (2025) “You get me”: a three-paper research project exploring how trainee psychotherapists experience and understand humour in psychoanalytic psychotherapy with young people in the context of professional training programmes. Doctoral thesis, University of Essex & Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust. DOI https://doi.org/10.5526/ERR-00041321
Parkinson, William (2025) “You get me”: a three-paper research project exploring how trainee psychotherapists experience and understand humour in psychoanalytic psychotherapy with young people in the context of professional training programmes. Doctoral thesis, University of Essex & Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust. DOI https://doi.org/10.5526/ERR-00041321
Abstract
This doctoral thesis explores the experience and understanding of humour in psychoanalytic psychotherapy with young people, focusing on how trainee psychotherapists encounter and make sense of humour in clinical practice. Comprising three interlinked papers, the research addresses a notable gap in psychotherapeutic literature, where humour is often overlooked or instrumentalised rather than studied as a lived, relational phenomenon. The first paper presents a literature review that critically analyses how humour is conceptualised across historical and theoretical paradigms - identified as Superiority, Relief, Humility, and Play - highlighting humour’s complex ontological status in psychotherapy. The review finds that while humour is widely present in therapeutic settings, its experiential and intersubjective dimensions remain under-theorised and insufficiently researched. Building on this foundation, the second paper uses interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA) to examine in-depth interviews with five trainee child and adolescent psychotherapists. This analysis reveals that humour often arises spontaneously in therapy sessions, accompanying moments of emotional resonance, therapeutic change, and mutual recognition. However, trainees frequently struggle to integrate these experiences into formal clinical discourse, citing uncertainty about humour’s legitimacy as clinical data. The third paper employs framework analysis to investigate how these trainees understand their experiences of humour. Findings indicate diverse explanatory models, shaped by personal, theoretical, and institutional influences, which often leave humour marginalised or ambiguously positioned within psychotherapy training. The thesis concludes that humour, as an emergent and co-created experience, can foster therapeutic engagement, creativity, and transformation. However, its marginal status reflects deeper tensions in psychotherapeutic training and practice about what constitutes valid clinical material. This research contributes to psychoanalytic knowledge by advocating for greater recognition of humour as a meaningful and potentially therapeutic phenomenon, and by offering a nuanced framework for understanding its place in the psychoanalytic encounter with young people.
Item Type: | Thesis (Doctoral) |
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Uncontrolled Keywords: | Psychotherapy; Adolescent Mental Health; Therapeutic Use of Humour; Intersubjective Clinical Experience; Therapist-Patient Dynamics; Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) in Psychotherapy Research; Framework Analysis in Clinical Settings; Psychotherapist Training and Development; Clinical Supervision and Reflective Practice; Humour as Clinical Data; Spontaneous Humour in Therapy; Emotional Resonance in Psychotherapy; Humour and Therapeutic Change; Play and Playfulness in Psychotherapy; Transitional Phenomena in Therapy; Therapeutic Alliance Formation; Communication in Psychotherapy; Lived Experience in Therapy; Clinical Decision-Making and Humour; Humour and Mental Health Resilience; Ontologies of Humour; Superiority Theory of Humour; Relief Theory of Humour; Humility in Therapeutic Practice; Humour as Play; Empathy and Humour; Therapist Well-being; Humour in Clinical Training Programmes; Psychodynamic Psychotherapy; Relational Psychoanalysis; Youth Psychotherapy Practice; Non-verbal Communication in Therapy; Ethics of Humour in Psychotherapy; Humour and Patient Engagement; Humour and Emotional Regulation; Phenomenology of Therapeutic Encounters; Cultural Dimensions of Humour in Therapy; Subjectivity in Clinical Encounters. |
Subjects: | B Philosophy. Psychology. Religion > BF Psychology H Social Sciences > H Social Sciences (General) L Education > LB Theory and practice of education L Education > LB Theory and practice of education > LB2300 Higher Education L Education > LC Special aspects of education R Medicine > RA Public aspects of medicine > RA790 Mental Health R Medicine > RC Internal medicine > RC0500 Psychoanalysis R Medicine > RJ Pediatrics > RJ101 Child Health. Child health services |
Depositing User: | William Parkinson |
Date Deposited: | 29 Jul 2025 14:08 |
Last Modified: | 29 Jul 2025 14:08 |
URI: | http://repository.essex.ac.uk/id/eprint/41321 |
Available files
Filename: 'You get me.' A three-paper research project exploring the experience and understanding of humour in psychoanalytic psychotherapy with young people.pdf