2003
DOI: 10.1177/1049732302250756
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Beyond the “Fetishism of Words”: Considerations on the Use of the Interview to Gather Chronic Illness Narratives

Abstract: The author explores the technique of interviewing chronic illness patients to obtain narratives of their illness experiences. It is argued that the perspective that interview responses are accurate reflections of experience (the "fetishism of words") hampers the understanding of patient voice and agency. Discussions of chronic illness and narrative are followed by an examination of the interview based on the work of Charles L. Briggs. The author then uses the concepts of self-presentation and social support to… Show more

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Cited by 55 publications
(51 citation statements)
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References 62 publications
(69 reference statements)
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“…Although we are not assigning value to particular stories, the very task of identifying predominant narratives and categorizing them is inherently culturally bound (Ezzy, 1998). We may have conceptualized these differently because of our particular cultural backgrounds and experiences (Miczo, 2003). We have taken efforts during the course of the analysis to discuss our findings with members of our research team who represent a variety of ethnic, age, and experience diversities.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although we are not assigning value to particular stories, the very task of identifying predominant narratives and categorizing them is inherently culturally bound (Ezzy, 1998). We may have conceptualized these differently because of our particular cultural backgrounds and experiences (Miczo, 2003). We have taken efforts during the course of the analysis to discuss our findings with members of our research team who represent a variety of ethnic, age, and experience diversities.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The authenticity of this relates to the message that the narrator wishes to convey to the audience-a narrative truth (Plummer, 1995)-rather than to any wider more "objective" truth. However the success of narratives also depends on the extent to which they "ring true" for the audience (Miczo, 2003). In identity presentation, narration involves a process "where both the narrator and the audience are involved in formulating,…”
Section: Narrative Research and Identity Expressionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A narrative approach (Polkinghorne, 1995;Rankin, 2002;Riessman, 1993) was selected, since studying occupation and occupational change processes using a narrative form has been clearly demonstrated to be useful (Clark, 1993;Clark, Carlson, & Polkinghorne, 1997;Josephsson, Asaba, Jonsson, & Alsaker, 2006;Molineux & Rickard, 2003;Wicks & Whiteford, 2003). Narratives are stories organized to allow the individual to make sense of, or impose order upon, a set of related experiences (Miczo, 2003;Polkinghorne;. The temporal order in the story is more than a mere sequence; it seeks to reveal a 'sense of the whole' (Mattingly, 1998;Mattingly & Lawlor, 2000).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%