Diagnosis as a Resource in the Social Representation of Mental Illness

Autores/as

  • Robert Ohlsson Stockholm University

Palabras clave:

diagnosis, social representation, self-help groups, cultural tools, meaning potential

Resumen

The theory of social representations has been applied in empirical research that

examines shared understandings of mental illness in different communities. Another line

of inquiry, drawing on a number of theoretical perspectives, has dealt with the functions

of diagnosis in everyday sense-making regarding mental problems. This paper suggest

how the theoretical model of social representation can be extended in order to account

for representation as interactive sense-making in which diagnostic concepts serve as a

mediating resource. An empirical study of discourse in self-help groups with people

sharing experiences of mental health problems is used to explore the role of diagnosis in

establishing shared understandings and identity. It is argued that when diagnoses are

anchored in lay knowledge, they acquire new meaning potentials and serve new

functions for representation that have ontological, epistemological, and moral

dimensions.

Biografía del autor/a

  • Robert Ohlsson, Stockholm University

    The theory of social representations has been applied in empirical research that

    examines shared understandings of mental illness in different communities. Another line

    of inquiry, drawing on a number of theoretical perspectives, has dealt with the functions

    of diagnosis in everyday sense-making regarding mental problems. This paper suggest

    how the theoretical model of social representation can be extended in order to account

    for representation as interactive sense-making in which diagnostic concepts serve as a

    mediating resource. An empirical study of discourse in self-help groups with people

    sharing experiences of mental health problems is used to explore the role of diagnosis in

    establishing shared understandings and identity. It is argued that when diagnoses are

    anchored in lay knowledge, they acquire new meaning potentials and serve new

    functions for representation that have ontological, epistemological, and moral

    dimensions.

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Publicado

2016-11-01