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‘Maybe I Shouldn’t Talk’: The Role of Power in the Telling of Mental Health Recovery Stories

Joy Llewellyn‐Beardsley, Stefan Rennick‐Egglestone, Kristian Pollock, Yasmin Ali, Emma Watson, Donna Franklin, Caroline Yeo, Fiona Ng, Rose McGranahan, Mike Slade, Alison Edgley

2022Qualitative Health Research31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Mental health 'recovery narratives' are increasingly used within teaching, learning and practice environments. The mainstreaming of their use has been critiqued by scholars and activists as a co-option of lived experience for organisational purposes. But how people report their experiences of telling their stories has not been investigated at scale. We present accounts from 71 people with lived experience of multiple inequalities of telling their stories in formal and informal settings. A reflexive thematic analysis was conducted within a critical constructivist approach. Our overarching finding was that questions of power were central to all accounts. Four themes were identified: (1) Challenging the status quo; (2) Risky consequences; (3) Producing 'acceptable' stories; (4) Untellable stories. We discuss how the concept of narrative power foregrounds inequalities in settings within which recovery stories are invited and co-constructed, and conclude that power imbalances complicate the seemingly benign act of telling stories of lived experience.

Topics & Concepts

NarrativeReflexivityStatus quoLived experiencePower (physics)Mental healthSociologyThematic analysisNarrative inquiryStorytellingMainstreamingInequalityPsychologyScale (ratio)PedagogyQualitative researchPolitical scienceSocial sciencePsychotherapistLiteratureMathematical analysisQuantum mechanicsMathematicsSpecial educationPhysicsLawArtMental Health and Patient InvolvementSocial Work Education and PracticeHealth Policy Implementation Science
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