"Nothing's changed, baby" : How the mental health narratives of people with multiple and complex needs disrupt the recovery framework

© 2023 The Authors..

The dominant narrative in mental health policy and practice has shifted in the 21st century from one of chronic ill health to a 'recovery' orientation. Knowledge of recovery is based on narratives of people with lived experience of mental distress. However the narratives of people experiencing structural inequalities are under-represented in recovery research. Meanwhile, uses of recovery narratives have been critiqued by survivor-researchers as a co-option of lived experience to serve neoliberal agendas. To address these twin concerns, we undertook a performative narrative analysis of two 'recovery narratives' of people with multiple and complex needs, analysing their co-construction at immediate/micro and structural/macro levels. We found two contrasting responses to the invitation to tell a recovery story: a narrative of personal lack and a narrative of resistance. We demonstrate through reflexive worked examples how the genre of recovery narrative, focused on personal transformation, may function to occlude structural causes of mental distress and reinforce personal responsibility in the face of unchanging living conditions. We conclude that unacknowledged epistemological assumptions may contribute to co-constructing individualist accounts of recovery. A critical, reflexive approach, together with transparent researcher positionality, is imperative to avoid the epistemic injustice of a decontextualised form of recovery narrative.

Medienart:

E-Artikel

Erscheinungsjahr:

2023

Erschienen:

2023

Enthalten in:

Zur Gesamtaufnahme - volume:3

Enthalten in:

SSM. Mental health - 3(2023) vom: 15. Dez., Seite 100221

Sprache:

Englisch

Beteiligte Personen:

Llewellyn-Beardsley, Joy [VerfasserIn]
Rennick-Egglestone, Stefan [VerfasserIn]
Callard, Felicity [VerfasserIn]
Pollock, Kristian [VerfasserIn]
Slade, Mike [VerfasserIn]
Edgley, Alison [VerfasserIn]

Links:

Volltext

Themen:

Epistemology
Homelessness
Journal Article
Mental health
Narrative analysis
Narrative inquiry
Recovery narratives
Sex working
Substance use
Trauma

Anmerkungen:

Date Revised 05.12.2023

published: Print

Citation Status PubMed-not-MEDLINE

doi:

10.1016/j.ssmmh.2023.100221

funding:

Förderinstitution / Projekttitel:

PPN (Katalog-ID):

NLM365360813