ABSTRACT

This thought-provoking volume explores the phenomenon of childhood experiences of sudden moments of self-awareness. Locating them as meaningful developmental events, it draws on, and is illustrated by, detailed analysis of individuals’ narratives of inner experience and recollections of childhood.

Uniquely highlighting the relevant writings of literary figures such as C.G. Jung, Vladimir Nabokov, Ian McEwan, and Henning Mankell, Dolph Kohnstamm explores the construction of selfhood, and the effects it has on time, space, and the other. Together with a chapter assessing the role of the default brain network in the development of self-conception, it both supports and challenges theories of development.

First Moments of Self-awareness in Childhood offers a new conception of children’s development of a sense of individuality and will be of great interest to scholars and students of psychology, philosophy, and sociology.

chapter 1|5 pages

The Development of Self-Awareness

chapter 2|3 pages

Sudden Insight

chapter 3|11 pages

Sudden Self-Awareness Among Authors

chapter 4|5 pages

Awareness of Being

chapter 5|6 pages

I am I, and not Someone Else

chapter 8|6 pages

This is my Body, I am Alive!

chapter 9|6 pages

The Firmament and the Sunlight

chapter 10|11 pages

Past Times, from now to the end

chapter 11|5 pages

Mirrors

chapter 12|4 pages

Extraordinary Experiences of Joy

chapter 13|7 pages

Other Sudden Insights

chapter 14|6 pages

Sudden Cognitive Insights

chapter 15|7 pages

A Mind-Wandering Network

chapter 16|3 pages

Coda