Narrative analysis in health psychology: a guide for analysis

Introduction: Telling stories is a natural way to explain our experiences to others. Through telling stories, we come to understand these experiences, and to explain our own and other’s place in the world. Stories are an opportunity to present a version of ourselves and to shape how we would like to...

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Main Authors: Gemma Wong, Mary Breheny
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2018-01-01
Series:Health Psychology and Behavioral Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21642850.2018.1515017
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spelling doaj-81531e64cab04da3b63fcd11e8e312082020-11-25T00:45:02ZengTaylor & Francis GroupHealth Psychology and Behavioral Medicine2164-28502018-01-016124526110.1080/21642850.2018.15150171515017Narrative analysis in health psychology: a guide for analysisGemma Wong0Mary Breheny1Massey UniversityMassey UniversityIntroduction: Telling stories is a natural way to explain our experiences to others. Through telling stories, we come to understand these experiences, and to explain our own and other’s place in the world. Stories are an opportunity to present a version of ourselves and to shape how we would like to be seen. By analysing stories, we also reveal something about the social world beyond the immediate story. Objectives: Applying a narrative approach to interviews can be challenging for the beginning narrative scholar. This paper provides a worked example of a narrative psychology approach to analysis. We present examples identifying the different levels at work in stories: personal stories, interpersonal accounts, and social narratives. Beyond identifying the levels, we offer further suggestions to assist with the narrative analysis of interview transcripts. These suggestions provide a way to start to understand why stories have been told, and what their telling reveals more broadly. To illustrate how to build a narrative analysis, we use a small set of interviews with older people in residential care.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21642850.2018.1515017Narrative analysisnarrative psychologyqualitative analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gemma Wong
Mary Breheny
spellingShingle Gemma Wong
Mary Breheny
Narrative analysis in health psychology: a guide for analysis
Health Psychology and Behavioral Medicine
Narrative analysis
narrative psychology
qualitative analysis
author_facet Gemma Wong
Mary Breheny
author_sort Gemma Wong
title Narrative analysis in health psychology: a guide for analysis
title_short Narrative analysis in health psychology: a guide for analysis
title_full Narrative analysis in health psychology: a guide for analysis
title_fullStr Narrative analysis in health psychology: a guide for analysis
title_full_unstemmed Narrative analysis in health psychology: a guide for analysis
title_sort narrative analysis in health psychology: a guide for analysis
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Health Psychology and Behavioral Medicine
issn 2164-2850
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Introduction: Telling stories is a natural way to explain our experiences to others. Through telling stories, we come to understand these experiences, and to explain our own and other’s place in the world. Stories are an opportunity to present a version of ourselves and to shape how we would like to be seen. By analysing stories, we also reveal something about the social world beyond the immediate story. Objectives: Applying a narrative approach to interviews can be challenging for the beginning narrative scholar. This paper provides a worked example of a narrative psychology approach to analysis. We present examples identifying the different levels at work in stories: personal stories, interpersonal accounts, and social narratives. Beyond identifying the levels, we offer further suggestions to assist with the narrative analysis of interview transcripts. These suggestions provide a way to start to understand why stories have been told, and what their telling reveals more broadly. To illustrate how to build a narrative analysis, we use a small set of interviews with older people in residential care.
topic Narrative analysis
narrative psychology
qualitative analysis
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21642850.2018.1515017
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