Research-Based Theater and “Stigmatized Trauma”: The Case of Suicide Bereavement

BackgroundExisting research shows that family members who suffer the loss of a loved one through suicide often experience self-blame and shame, and that this limits their grieving process. It can also lock them into stigmatized positions and the notion that either somebody or a dysfunctional family...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Anneli Silvén Hagström
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01129/full
id doaj-cb0f09a2ee51495487a4888a94d2d539
record_format Article
spelling doaj-cb0f09a2ee51495487a4888a94d2d5392020-11-25T03:13:13ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782020-06-011110.3389/fpsyg.2020.01129538131Research-Based Theater and “Stigmatized Trauma”: The Case of Suicide BereavementAnneli Silvén HagströmBackgroundExisting research shows that family members who suffer the loss of a loved one through suicide often experience self-blame and shame, and that this limits their grieving process. It can also lock them into stigmatized positions and the notion that either somebody or a dysfunctional family is to blame for the suicide.AimThis article investigates from a narrative perspective how a theater play might counteract the stigma that surrounds suicide bereavement by contributing destigmatizing understandings of suicide.MethodsA theater play was performed in a churchyard theater in Stockholm, Sweden, in 2019. Audience members were asked to write down their free reflections on a form distributed at the theater. In particular, they were asked to assess whether they found the play related to their own lives and, if so, how; and to describe what they had learned. Their written reflections [N = 41] were analyzed from a narrative methodological perspective to investigate their responses to the play. Three categories of audience member were identified from their responses: people with their own suicide bereavement experiences; people with similar but different experiences of stigmatized trauma; and people who did not report any experiences of suicide or stigmatized trauma.ResultsThe suicide-bereaved generally reported familiarity with the thematic performed, in particular the “why question,” the blame and shame responses and the silenced family communication. Most of these aspects were also shared by those affected by other types of stigmatized trauma. Respondents from all categories emphasized how they had learned that suicide is a desperate rather than a deliberated act, caused by overwhelming emotional pain or depression. Ultimately, suicide was perceived as an involuntary death caused by complex interacting factors linked to both inner vulnerabilities and stressful life events, for which no one was to blame.ConclusionThe results show that research-based theater isa time-limited and cost-effective method of introducing alternative meanings and identities to both individual mourners and the broader cultural context from which stigma originates, and how it can have destigmatizing effects on a stigmatized trauma such as suicide bereavement.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01129/fullbereavementmeaning-makingnarrativeself-formationstigmasuicide
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anneli Silvén Hagström
spellingShingle Anneli Silvén Hagström
Research-Based Theater and “Stigmatized Trauma”: The Case of Suicide Bereavement
Frontiers in Psychology
bereavement
meaning-making
narrative
self-formation
stigma
suicide
author_facet Anneli Silvén Hagström
author_sort Anneli Silvén Hagström
title Research-Based Theater and “Stigmatized Trauma”: The Case of Suicide Bereavement
title_short Research-Based Theater and “Stigmatized Trauma”: The Case of Suicide Bereavement
title_full Research-Based Theater and “Stigmatized Trauma”: The Case of Suicide Bereavement
title_fullStr Research-Based Theater and “Stigmatized Trauma”: The Case of Suicide Bereavement
title_full_unstemmed Research-Based Theater and “Stigmatized Trauma”: The Case of Suicide Bereavement
title_sort research-based theater and “stigmatized trauma”: the case of suicide bereavement
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2020-06-01
description BackgroundExisting research shows that family members who suffer the loss of a loved one through suicide often experience self-blame and shame, and that this limits their grieving process. It can also lock them into stigmatized positions and the notion that either somebody or a dysfunctional family is to blame for the suicide.AimThis article investigates from a narrative perspective how a theater play might counteract the stigma that surrounds suicide bereavement by contributing destigmatizing understandings of suicide.MethodsA theater play was performed in a churchyard theater in Stockholm, Sweden, in 2019. Audience members were asked to write down their free reflections on a form distributed at the theater. In particular, they were asked to assess whether they found the play related to their own lives and, if so, how; and to describe what they had learned. Their written reflections [N = 41] were analyzed from a narrative methodological perspective to investigate their responses to the play. Three categories of audience member were identified from their responses: people with their own suicide bereavement experiences; people with similar but different experiences of stigmatized trauma; and people who did not report any experiences of suicide or stigmatized trauma.ResultsThe suicide-bereaved generally reported familiarity with the thematic performed, in particular the “why question,” the blame and shame responses and the silenced family communication. Most of these aspects were also shared by those affected by other types of stigmatized trauma. Respondents from all categories emphasized how they had learned that suicide is a desperate rather than a deliberated act, caused by overwhelming emotional pain or depression. Ultimately, suicide was perceived as an involuntary death caused by complex interacting factors linked to both inner vulnerabilities and stressful life events, for which no one was to blame.ConclusionThe results show that research-based theater isa time-limited and cost-effective method of introducing alternative meanings and identities to both individual mourners and the broader cultural context from which stigma originates, and how it can have destigmatizing effects on a stigmatized trauma such as suicide bereavement.
topic bereavement
meaning-making
narrative
self-formation
stigma
suicide
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01129/full
work_keys_str_mv AT annelisilvenhagstrom researchbasedtheaterandstigmatizedtraumathecaseofsuicidebereavement
_version_ 1724648039277133824