Narratives of friendship and mental health

Research, theory and mental health policy draws attention to the importance of family, social networks, community, employers and learning contexts in maintaining mental health and inclusion. Yet the meaningful complexities of friendship to psychological health and public policy has not received sust...

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Main Author: Doran, Dan
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/63757/
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author Doran, Dan
author_facet Doran, Dan
author_sort Doran, Dan
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Research, theory and mental health policy draws attention to the importance of family, social networks, community, employers and learning contexts in maintaining mental health and inclusion. Yet the meaningful complexities of friendship to psychological health and public policy has not received sustained analysis, and policy emphasis is often restricted towards family relations. This study explores the friendship-experiences of seventeen people who have endured mental health difficulties, through a critical narrative inquiry of their stories of friendship. A hermeneutics of suspicion, involving stigma, feminist and mad studies is used to explore meaning within the narratives. The study reveals the participants’ stories of problems of daily living, illness and stigma, of friendship as freedom and recognition, and friendship’s contribution to personal agency and establishing a valued position in society. The study develops a perspective of how compassion in friendship has helped articulate and reframe identities to one’s self, to others, and to distress, and therefore the potential contribution of friendship to living with mental distress. The thesis argues that mental health studies have been dominated by institutionalised relationships, of which friendship has been made to fit into theoretical frameworks of family- and kin-relationships. The thesis presents an alternative view of friendship to aid in the reformulation of the varieties of social relationships shared by people through mental distress. Additionally, there have been very few narrative studies that explore the friendship experiences of people with mental ill health and this study adds to a growing literature.
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spelling nottingham-637572025-02-28T12:24:01Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/63757/ Narratives of friendship and mental health Doran, Dan Research, theory and mental health policy draws attention to the importance of family, social networks, community, employers and learning contexts in maintaining mental health and inclusion. Yet the meaningful complexities of friendship to psychological health and public policy has not received sustained analysis, and policy emphasis is often restricted towards family relations. This study explores the friendship-experiences of seventeen people who have endured mental health difficulties, through a critical narrative inquiry of their stories of friendship. A hermeneutics of suspicion, involving stigma, feminist and mad studies is used to explore meaning within the narratives. The study reveals the participants’ stories of problems of daily living, illness and stigma, of friendship as freedom and recognition, and friendship’s contribution to personal agency and establishing a valued position in society. The study develops a perspective of how compassion in friendship has helped articulate and reframe identities to one’s self, to others, and to distress, and therefore the potential contribution of friendship to living with mental distress. The thesis argues that mental health studies have been dominated by institutionalised relationships, of which friendship has been made to fit into theoretical frameworks of family- and kin-relationships. The thesis presents an alternative view of friendship to aid in the reformulation of the varieties of social relationships shared by people through mental distress. Additionally, there have been very few narrative studies that explore the friendship experiences of people with mental ill health and this study adds to a growing literature. 2022-07-31 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/63757/1/DORAN%20Dan%20Narratives%20of%20Friendship%20and%20Mental%20Health.pdf Doran, Dan (2022) Narratives of friendship and mental health. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Narrative narratives story stories friendship friend friends relationship interpersonal social mental health mental illness distress critical analysis freedom stigma compassion capital policy practice
spellingShingle Narrative
narratives
story
stories
friendship
friend
friends
relationship
interpersonal
social
mental health
mental illness
distress
critical analysis
freedom
stigma
compassion
capital
policy
practice
Doran, Dan
Narratives of friendship and mental health
title Narratives of friendship and mental health
title_full Narratives of friendship and mental health
title_fullStr Narratives of friendship and mental health
title_full_unstemmed Narratives of friendship and mental health
title_short Narratives of friendship and mental health
title_sort narratives of friendship and mental health
topic Narrative
narratives
story
stories
friendship
friend
friends
relationship
interpersonal
social
mental health
mental illness
distress
critical analysis
freedom
stigma
compassion
capital
policy
practice
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/63757/