Homeward bound
Enacted narratives of the return to home after a short-term stay at a psychiatric centre
With a focus on enacted narratives, this ethnographic study addresses how people with mental illness communicate returning home after a treatment stay at a psychiatric centre. Data were analysed based on Ricoeur’s theory of narrative and action. Our analysis consisted of three analytic layers: the significant issue of discharge, identifying three stories of how being on the way home is enacted, and a further interpretation and discussion. The narrative analysis shows how significant issues of returning home are enacted among persons in everyday activities at one centre, and how an inherent ambiguity raised some challenges within the field of mental health. This study shows how conducting everyday activities enable people use the available narrative resources to negotiate the self; hence they reflect and create thoughts about the return home that are shared among persons at the centre.
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Cited by (3)
Cited by three other publications
Reed, Nina Petersen, Staffan Josephsson & Sissel Alsaker
2018.
Community mental health work: Negotiating support of users' recovery.
International Journal of Mental Health Nursing 27:2
► pp. 814 ff.
Reed, Nina Petersen, Staffan Josephsson & Sissel Alsaker
2020.
A narrative study of mental health recovery: exploring unique, open-ended and collective processes.
International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and Well-being 15:1
► pp. 1747252 ff.
Alsaker, Sissel & Lena Ulfseth
2017.
Narrative imagination in milieu therapy: Staff members’ stories of relational change.
Journal of Occupational Science 24:4
► pp. 535 ff.
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