Narrative Identities and the Management of Personal Accountability in Talk about ME: A Discursive Psychology Approach to Illness Narrative
- 1 March 2001
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Health Psychology
- Vol. 6 (2) , 247-259
- https://doi.org/10.1177/135910530100600210
Abstract
This article takes a discursive psychology approach to the analysis of illness narrative. The controversial topic of ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis), otherwise known as chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), is used as a case study to examine the dilemmatics of illness talk. Using data from an ME narrative, I explore the complex and subtle discursive work performed by participants to show how attributional stories and identity formulations are linked together in a narrative that works to construct ME as a physical disease while countering potential accusations of malingering or psychological vulnerability. In working to counter such explanations, sufferers paradoxically implicate themselves in an interpretation of their illness as self-inflicted through overwork and mismanagement. In previous research, tales of frenetic lifestyles prior to the onset of ME have provided analysts (and journalists) with grounds for constructing their own attributional stories in the form of ‘opt-out’ or ‘burnout’ theories of ME/CFS. An ethnomethodologically informed discursive psychology provides a non-cognitivist approach to analysis which looks in detail at how sufferers themselves make sense of ME as a practical activity and how their identities are constructed as part of that process.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Whose Text? Whose Context?Discourse & Society, 1997
- Quality of attention in chronic fatigue syndrome: Subjective reports of everyday attention and cognitive difficulty, and performance on tasks of focused attentionBritish Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1993
- The Rhetoric of Self-Change: Illness Experience as NarrativeThe Sociological Quarterly, 1993
- Treatment of Patients with Chronic Fatigue SyndromeDrugs, 1989
- Thoughts on the management of myalgic encephalomyelitisBritish Homoeopathic journal, 1989
- Joint remembering: Constructing an account of shared experience through conversational discourseDiscourse Processes, 1986
- Talking Social Structure: Discourse, Domination and the Watergate HearingsAmerican Sociological Review, 1985
- Loss of self: a fundamental form of suffering in the chronically illSociology of Health & Illness, 1983
- Development and validation of the Health Locus of Control (HLC) Scale.Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1976
- Lay concepts of etiologyJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1964