Jarring Encounters: Discomfort, Disruption, and Dominant Narratives of Suicide.

IF 2.6 2区 医学 Q2 INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE Qualitative Health Research Pub Date : 2024-12-04 DOI:10.1177/10497323241302653
Rebecca Helman, Sarah I Huque, Amy Chandler
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Abstract

In researching experiences and understandings of suicide bereavement across diverse communities in Scotland, we expected to hear difficult, distressing, and painful narratives. However, one of the 31 in-depth qualitative interviews that we conducted was particularly and unexpectedly jarring. In this narrative, Freya explained how her ex-partner took his life after she escaped from his domestic abuse. This narrative produces a deep sense of discomfort in the interviewer, as her expectations about suicide bereavement are disrupted. Taking this discomfort as a starting point, we explore what this jarring encounter tells us about dominant and absent narratives of suicide. We interrogate how this narrative of suicide within the context of domestic violence perpetration bumps up against dominant narratives of a "male suicide crisis" and "relationship breakdown," through which men are positioned solely as "victims." Drawing on perspectives from feminist, affective, and reflexive qualitative research, critical suicide studies, and an abductive approach to analysis, we explore how attending to uncomfortable feelings that are generated within the research encounter can enable us to develop more complex, nuanced, and messy understandings of suicide.

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不和谐的遭遇:不适、破坏和自杀的主导叙事。
在研究苏格兰不同社区对自杀丧亲的经历和理解时,我们期望听到困难、痛苦和痛苦的叙述。然而,在我们进行的31次深度定性访谈中,有一次特别出人意料地令人震惊。在这段叙述中,弗雷娅解释了她的前伴侣是如何在她逃离家暴后自杀的。这种叙述让采访者产生了深深的不适,因为她对自杀丧亲的期望被打破了。以这种不适为出发点,我们探讨了这种不和谐的遭遇告诉我们的关于自杀的主流和缺席的叙述。我们探究在家庭暴力的背景下,这种自杀叙事是如何与“男性自杀危机”和“关系破裂”的主流叙事相冲突的,在这些叙事中,男性被完全定位为“受害者”。从女权主义、情感和反思性定性研究、批判性自杀研究和溯因性分析的角度出发,我们探索了在研究遭遇中产生的不舒服感觉如何使我们能够对自杀产生更复杂、细致入微和混乱的理解。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.80
自引率
6.20%
发文量
109
期刊介绍: QUALITATIVE HEALTH RESEARCH is an international, interdisciplinary, refereed journal for the enhancement of health care and to further the development and understanding of qualitative research methods in health care settings. We welcome manuscripts in the following areas: the description and analysis of the illness experience, health and health-seeking behaviors, the experiences of caregivers, the sociocultural organization of health care, health care policy, and related topics. We also seek critical reviews and commentaries addressing conceptual, theoretical, methodological, and ethical issues pertaining to qualitative enquiry.
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