Strategic uses of narrative in the presentation of self and illness: A research note
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Narrative arcs and shaping influences in long-term medication adherence
2021, Social Science and MedicineCitation Excerpt :To understand chronic illness medication adherence as it retrospectively unfolds over time, we propose taking an extended, experience-centered, narrative approach to its study. This approach permits temporally tracing occurrences and changes in adherence from the perspective of patients as they recall experiences with medication (Riessman, 1990; Squire, 2013). The questions addressed are what are narrative arcs of long-term adherence, or sequences of medication taking experiences over the years?
Health and hostile hospitality: Understanding asylum applicants’ narratives of life and health in the UK
2020, Social Science and MedicineCitation Excerpt :Descriptions of pathology draw attention to shared humanity between individuals who may have little in common and encourage the recognition of human-ness, despite delegitimised status (De Genova, 2002). A small body of literature describes the social uses of illness narratives in other contexts, suggesting that bodily stories can be employed as a form of expression, and as a way to manipulate the relation of self to environment (Riessman, 1990; Heurtin-Roberts, 1993; Strahl, 2003). In parallel, anthropologists have highlighted how asylum applicants negotiate issues of increasingly polarised representation, focusing on reshaped identity and resilience (Clare et al., 2014; Cuthill 2017).
Narrative critical care: A literary analysis of first-person critical illness pathographies
2020, Journal of Critical CareCitation Excerpt :Efforts have been made to help patients put their experiences in order by providing a diary written by nurses or family, to help them create structure and chronology to events during the ICU-stay [1,10-12]. Personal narratives are empowering when the illness experience is put into a temporal sequence of events [13-15]. To help people make sense of their experiences, Arthur Frank (1995) proposed three fundamental illness narratives: 1) Restitution narrative: I was healthy, I got sick, I goth healthy again, 2) Quest narrative: I was healthy, I got sick, I learned from my sickness, and 3) Chaos narrative: I was healthy, I got sick, life won't get any better [16].
Disrupted lives: How people create meaning in a chaotic world
2023, Disrupted Lives: How People Create Meaning in a Chaotic World"My Baby Went Straight to Heaven": Morality Work in Abortion Online Storytelling
2023, Social Problems