“也许没有人真的疯了,但每个人都只是有点疯狂”:在TED演讲中构建与疯狂生活的经历

Victoria Morris, Hannah S. Scott
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摘要

本文通过从TED演讲媒体平台上提供的15个精神疾病患者的第一手资料中提取主题,利用扎根的归纳定性研究方法,探讨了精神疾病患者的受害经历。新出现的主题包括:(1)疾病的受害影响,包括药物的影响和耻辱的影响,(2)正常,(3)在克服心理健康问题所带来的障碍的过程中寻求帮助的重要性,以及(4)他人的受害。我们得出的结论是,我们样本中的说话者,尽管他们反映了非凡的功能水平,但仍然将自己视为贝克尔(1991[1963])所描述的局外人,扮演着道德企业家的角色,通过各种策略努力使疯狂正常化。
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“Maybe No One Is Really Crazy, but Everyone Is Just a Little Bit Mad”: Framing Experiences of Living with Madness in the TED Talk
This article explores the victimizing experiences of individuals with mental illness using grounded inductive qualitative research methods, by extracting themes from 15 first-hand accounts of living with mental illness delivered on the TED Talks media platform. Emergent themes included (1) victimizing effects of the illness including the effects of medication and the effects of stigma, (2) normalcy, (3) the importance of help-seeking in the process of overcoming obstacles presented by mental health issues, and (4) victimization by others. We conclude that the speakers in our sample, even though they reflect an extraordinary level of functioning, still view themselves as what Becker (1991 [1963]) describes as outsiders, acting as moral entrepreneurs, crusading to normalize madness through a variety of strategies.
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