Autoethnographies in Psychology and Mental Health
Routledge (Verlag)
978-1-032-50760-6 (ISBN)
Edited by two leading figures, this volume broadens the concept of psychology beyond its conventional, mainstream academic boundaries and challenges pre-conceived and received notions of what constitutes ‘psychology’ and ‘mental health’. This book collects new autoethnographic writers in psychology and mental health from across as diverse a range of disciplines and, in doing so, makes a strong case for the legitimacy of subjectivity, emotionality and lived experience as epistemic and pedagogic resources. The collection also troubles the related concept of ‘mental health.’ In contemporary times, this is either biomedically over-colonised (welcomed by some but resisted by others), often regarded by lay and professional people alike in terms of an ‘ordered or disordered’ binary (comforting for some but associated with stigma and othering for others), or, at worst, is reduced to a set of hackneyed memes – the stuff of Breakfast television (well-intentioned and undoubtedly reassuring and helpful for some but patronising and naïve for others). Overall, the volume promotes the subjective and lived-experiential voices of its contributors – the hallmark of autoethnographic writing.
Autoethnographies in Psychology and Mental Health will be of interest to psychology and mental health students and professionals with an interest in qualitative inquiry as it intersects with autoethnography and mental health.
Alec Grant, PhD, was a Visiting Professor at the University of Bolton, but from 2024 has reverted to his nonaffiliated title of Independent Scholar. He was the recipient of the ICAE Inaugural Lifetime Contribution Award in 2020 and is widely published in journals such as Qualitative Inquiry, The Qualitative Report, and the Journal of Autoethnography. Jerome Carson, PhD, is Professor of Psychology at the University of Bolton. He did his Psychology degree at the University of Reading and trained as a clinical psychologist at the University of East London. He was awarded his PhD by King’s College London in 2005.
01. Introduction: The Importance of autoethnography for psychology and mental health 02. Us and Them 03. The Shackles of Lupus, and the Redefining Path of Faith and Positive Psychology 04. Tell Fear, No: The Hope Is You (An Autoethnographic Account Of A Male Sexual Violence Survivor’s Journey Through An Academic Psychology Education, To Understand How To Bring Himself And Others Home Safely) 05. Autistic, and Challenging the Neoliberal Academy in Hong Kong 06. My Changing Journey 07. My Life with Dyslexia: An autoethnograpy 08. Laughter, Joy, and Mental Health: An autoethnographic case study of Joe Hoare 09. A Grief Odyssey 10. Cultural Impact on Professional Identity: Struggling to connect with professional titles 11. A Conversational Autoethnography on Experiencing Loss and Grief 12. Pandemic Detectives: A phone corpse on the university campus” 13. A Phoenix Rising: Journeys through childhood trauma 14. Catching ‘Sliding Door’ Moments: Finding purpose in life, and Maintaining love, compassion and mental wellbeing 15. Building Resilience from Bad Experiences: An autoethnographic account 16. Locating and Decentering Professional Expertise as a Feminist Critical Psychologist in India 17. Mental Health and the Body: An autoethnography of neuralgia, migraine, and insulin resistance 18. Spurious Emotional Understanding: What do ‘ordinary’ people know about entrapment in the bubbly, fizzing, ‘hung-before’ feeling? 19. Dropping the Autoethnographic Seeds in the Soil
Erscheinungsdatum | 14.09.2024 |
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Zusatzinfo | 3 Halftones, black and white; 3 Illustrations, black and white |
Verlagsort | London |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 152 x 229 mm |
Gewicht | 620 g |
Themenwelt | Geisteswissenschaften ► Psychologie ► Allgemeine Psychologie |
ISBN-10 | 1-032-50760-8 / 1032507608 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-032-50760-6 / 9781032507606 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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