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Composing suicide: Narrative and suicidal behaviour

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Composing suicide: Narrative and suicidal behaviour Scott Fitzpatrick BA (Hons) PhD Candidate scott.fitzpatrick_at_sydney.edu.au Arguments for a narrative understanding ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Composing suicide: Narrative and suicidal behaviour


1
Composing suicide Narrative and suicidal
behaviour
  • Scott
    Fitzpatrick BA (Hons)

  • PhD Candidate
  • scott.fitzpatrick_at_s
    ydney.edu.au

2
Arguments for a narrative understanding of
suicidal behaviour
  • The discourse on depression is a primary site of
    contestation in suicide research.
  • The focus on individual biological and cognitive
    function is not ethically neutral.
  • Cultural understandings of depression emphasise
    important socio-cultural features.
  • Narrative frameworks provide us with the means
    for studying these interrelations.

3
Narrative
  • A primary method for structuring experience and
    knowledge, for organizing and making sense of
    events, and for providing order and coherence to
    a possible reality.
  • Provides a range of previously structured models
    with which to transform or re-describe that
    reality.
  • (Prince, 2000, p. 129)

4
Suicidal behaviour and mental illness
  • the mental illness tautology whereby the
    (suicidal) act defines the illness and the
    illness defines the act.
    (OConnor, 2003)
  • Has limited metaphoric utility in explaining
    suicidal behaviour and results in the omission or
    downplaying of important social and
    cultural-normative features.

5
Culture and depression
  • Depression Emotion or disorder?
  • Normal or pathological?
  • (cf. Kleinman
    Good, 1985)

6
Culture and depression
  • on Aristotles account, while emotions give
    rise to affective impulses, they are generated by
    a state of mind in which factual beliefs and
    moral judgements have a central role in the
    causation and individuation of emotions

  • (Harré,1986, p. 2)

7
Anna
  • Participants recruited through two Community
    Mental Health Centres in Sydney.

Age Contact with mental health services prior to attempt First suicide attempt No. of days between attempt and interview Diagnosis as per clinical file at time of interview
33 Yes No (2nd) 21 Depression
  • Some participants in prior contact with Mental
    Health Services, others followed-up by Acute Care
    Services after being hospitalized following
    suicide attempt.

8
Composing depression and suicidal behaviour
  • And then one morning the guy who sat next to me
    at work asked me if I was ok and everything just
    fell to pieces.
  • I found myself just leaving work in the middle of
    the day and going home and just sitting on the
    bus on the way home and just crying.
  • It just felt like someone had punched me in the
    chest. I felt like I had this gaping hole in my
    chest. It was almost like a physical feeling of
    pain.

9
A rhetoric of control
  • Feminist treatments of the question of
    emotion have tended to portray emotions not as
    chaos but as a discourse on problems. Talk about
    anger, for example, can be interpreted as an
    attempt to identify the existence of
    inappropriate restraint or injustice. Sadness is
    a discourse on the problem of loss By extension,
    talk about the control of emotions, would be, in
    this feminist discourse, talk about the
    suppression of public acknowledgment of
    problems.(Lutz,1996, p.140)

10
A rhetoric of control
  • Well it makes it harder for me to talk about
    because it makes me feel like they dont want to
    hear like they dont really want to know, and
    that if I do tell them the truth, that I would
    upset them.

11
Narrative, emotions and suicidal behaviour
  • Subject-referring emotions always occur
    within a social matrix of goals and aspirations,
    aspirations that naturally achieve clarity and
    definition in language and often at the
    instigation of prior emotions that reveal value
    directions in our lives. Emotions can thereby
    bring us to ourselves in their demand for
    understanding they very often demand a narrative
    to be unfolded which gives meaning to their
    manifestation and, thereby, an interpretation to
    our lives. (Kerby, 1991, pp. 50-51)

12
Narrative, emotions and suicidal behaviour
  • Narrative is not only a creative, but also a
    receptive-interpretive act (Kerby, 1991, p.47).
  • Thus, it provides creative possibilities for
    providing coherence to lives and identities over
    time, but equally, it may present a number of
    constraints.

13
A social theory of depression and suicidal
behaviour
  • Locates the sources of depression in the
    meaningful relation between self and the world.
  • it is when a loss of value stimulates an
    appraisal of ones place in the world as being
    profoundly hopeless that prolonged and
    recognizable depression is likely to ensue.
  • (Keyes, 1985, p.158)

14
Anna
  • I find it hard to imagine things going back to
    normal. I find it really hard to imagine things
    being like they used to be. I guess I had less
    worries. I was more carefree. I was a more open
    person, more communicative.

15
Anna
  • I would like to be able to be not on
    medication, and not having to see a psychologist
    once a week and a psychiatrist once a month, and
    worrying if Im going to be hospitalised and that
    kind of thing. Not being worried about having to
    take time off work without pay, or worried about
    not letting anyone at work know that things
    arent great because Im worried how theyll
    react and stifle my career opportunities because
    they think Im not going to be able to cope, or
    they dont trust that Im going to be able to do
    my job to its fullest extent.

16
References
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    C., Treacher, A. (2000). Introduction. In M.
    Andrews, S. Day Sclater, C. Squire A. Treacher
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    Routledge.
  • Brockmeier, J., Harré, R. (2001). Narrative
    Problems and promises of an alternative paradigm.
    In J. Brockmeier D. Carbaugh (Eds.), Narrative
    and identity Studies in autobiography, self and
    culture (pp. 39-58). Amsterdam Philadelphia
    John Benjamins.
  • Brooks, P. (1996). The law as narrative and
    rhetoric. In P. Brooks P. Gewirtz (Eds.), Law's
    stories (pp. 14-22). New Haven Yale University
    Press.
  • Brown, G. W., Harris, T. (1978). Social origins
    of depression A study of psychiatric disorder in
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  • Gergen, K. J., Graumann, C. F. (1996).
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    introduction. In K. J. Gergen C. F. Graumann
    (Eds.), Historical dimensions of psychological
    discourse (pp. 1-13). Cambridge Cambridge
    University Press.
  • Harré, R. (1986). An outline of the social
    constructionist viewpoint. In R. Harré (Ed.), The
    social construction of emotion (pp. 2-14). Oxford
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  • Kerby, A. P. (1991). Narrative and the self.
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  • Keyes, C. F. (1985). The interpretive basis of
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