Four published memoirs refute culturally dominant ideas about severe mental illness as personal weakness, as something shameful, and as a condition that necessarily leads to isolation and disenfranchisement. The narrative structure and content of the memoirs reveal that people’s experience differs from the hegemonic discourse: while narrating symptoms, diagnosis, treatment, and acceptance of the illness, all four authors present themselves as accomplished, self-possessed, and socially integrated. Their memoirs, and the act of narrating their experiences with mental illness, challenge the established cultural discourse of mental illness as limitation. The narratives help change that discourse and our social attitudes toward people with mental illness.
Cosh, Suzanne M., Shona Crabb, Dominic G. McNeil & Phillip J. Tully
2022. Constructions of athlete mental health post-retirement: a discursive analysis of stigmatising and legitimising versions of transition distress in the Australian broadcast media. Qualitative Research in Sport, Exercise and Health 14:7 ► pp. 1045 ff.
Collins, Devin
2017. The Art of Faking a Smile. In Doing Autoethnography, ► pp. 217 ff.
Rothfelder, Katy & Davi Johnson Thornton
2017. Man Interrupted: Mental Illness Narrative as a Rhetoric of Proximity. Rhetoric Society Quarterly 47:4 ► pp. 359 ff.
Ricks, Lacey, Sarah Kitchens, Tonia Goodrich & Elizabeth Hancock
2014. My Story: The Use of Narrative Therapy in Individual and Group Counseling. Journal of Creativity in Mental Health 9:1 ► pp. 99 ff.
Gardiner, Mary, Elizabeth Radian, Amanda Neiman & Robin Neiman
2011. Declaring Label Preferences: Terminology Research in Mental Health. Canadian Journal of Community Mental Health 30:1 ► pp. 121 ff.
O’Brien, Mary R. & David Clark
2010. Use of unsolicited first‐person written illness narratives in research: systematic review. Journal of Advanced Nursing 66:8 ► pp. 1671 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 25 october 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
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