Narrative, ethics and severe mental illness.
No === Starting from the premise that people are essentially narrative beings, I argue that the onset of severe mental illness compromises the narrative enterprise of being able to construct one's Self and one's relationships inmeaningful and coherent ways. This is due to both the curtailm...
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ndltd-BRADFORD-oai-bradscholars.brad.ac.uk-10454-32682019-08-31T03:02:10Z Narrative, ethics and severe mental illness. Baldwin, P. Clive Degenerative disease Cerebral disorder Central nervous system disease Nervous system diseases Human Therapeutic relation Treatment Clinical management Mental disorder Senile dementia No Starting from the premise that people are essentially narrative beings, I argue that the onset of severe mental illness compromises the narrative enterprise of being able to construct one's Self and one's relationships inmeaningful and coherent ways. This is due to both the curtailment of opportunities for narrative engagement and the dispossession of those whose narratives do not conform to the current conceptualization of narrative and narrativity. In these circumstances, supporting the narrative enterprise is an ethical endeavour that requires that we examine not only which narratives we construct, but also how we construct them. This requires a re-thinking of what might constitute narrative and how we might facilitate or enhance the narrativity of people with severe mental illness. Following this, I suggest four means to support the narrativity of people with severe mental illness: through maintaining narrative continuity, maintaining narrative agency, countering master narratives and attention to small stories. 2009-08-11T07:25:10Z 2009-08-11T07:25:10Z 2005 Article not applicable paper Baldwin, P.C. (2005). Narrative, ethics and severe mental illness. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry. Vol. 39, No. 11/12, pp. 1022-1029. http://hdl.handle.net/10454/3268 en http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1440-1614.2005.01721.x |
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en |
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Degenerative disease Cerebral disorder Central nervous system disease Nervous system diseases Human Therapeutic relation Treatment Clinical management Mental disorder Senile dementia |
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Degenerative disease Cerebral disorder Central nervous system disease Nervous system diseases Human Therapeutic relation Treatment Clinical management Mental disorder Senile dementia Baldwin, P. Clive Narrative, ethics and severe mental illness. |
description |
No === Starting from the premise that people are essentially narrative beings, I argue that the onset of severe mental illness compromises the narrative enterprise of being able to construct one's Self and one's relationships inmeaningful and coherent ways. This is due to both the curtailment of opportunities for narrative engagement and the dispossession of those whose narratives do not conform to the current conceptualization of narrative and narrativity. In these circumstances, supporting the narrative enterprise is an ethical endeavour that requires that we examine not only which narratives we construct, but also how we construct them. This requires a re-thinking of what might constitute narrative and how we might facilitate or enhance the narrativity of people with severe mental illness. Following this, I suggest four means to support the narrativity of people with severe mental illness: through maintaining narrative continuity, maintaining narrative agency, countering master narratives and attention to small stories. |
author |
Baldwin, P. Clive |
author_facet |
Baldwin, P. Clive |
author_sort |
Baldwin, P. Clive |
title |
Narrative, ethics and severe mental illness. |
title_short |
Narrative, ethics and severe mental illness. |
title_full |
Narrative, ethics and severe mental illness. |
title_fullStr |
Narrative, ethics and severe mental illness. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Narrative, ethics and severe mental illness. |
title_sort |
narrative, ethics and severe mental illness. |
publishDate |
2009 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10454/3268 |
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AT baldwinpclive narrativeethicsandseverementalillness |
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