Narratives and Mental Health: An Introduction
Jarmila Mildorf, Elisabeth Punzi & Christoph Singer
Part I: Theoretical Approaches to Researching Narratives and Mental
Health
Chapter 1: Imagining an Alternate Psychology
Brian Schiff
Chapter 2: I Have Many Sick Hearts: Stories about Illness and
Life
Jens Brockmeier & Maria I. Medved
Chapter 3: Narrative Practices in Mental Health: Narrative Therapy
and the Fictive Stance
Daniel D. Hutto
Part II: Current Narrative Practices in Psychology and
Psychotherapy
Chapter 4: The Art of Teaching the Art of Listening: An Interview
Study with University Teachers in Clinical Psychology and Social
Work
Elisabeth Punzi & Malgorzata Erikson
Chapter 5: The Aftermath of Silencing the Trauma - A Narrative Case
Study
Soly Erlandsson & Nicolas Dauman
Chapter 6: Writing as Narrative Resource in Therapeutic Settings:
Diaries, Sketches, Notes
Jarmila Mildorf & Daniel Ketteler
Chapter 7: What Constitutes Mad Behavior? Changes in the Grand
Narrative of Disorder Delineated in Psychiatric Diagnoses between
1832 and 1980
Malin Hildebrand Karlén
Part III: Narratives of Aging, Dementia and Depression
Chapter 8: How to Narrate a Healthy Life: Life-Stories and Mental
Health in Interviews with the Elderly Aged 90+
Mari Hatavara
Chapter 9: Narrative Ethics and Dementia: Critical Comments and
Modifications
Daniela Ringkamp
Chapter 10: Narrative Experiments with Medical Categorisation and
Normalisation in B. S. Johnson's House Mother Normal
Sara Strauss
Chapter 11: Mental Illness Representations in the German Mass
Media: The Case of Depression
Marina Iakushevich
Part IV: Mental Health, Life Storying, Trauma and Artistic
Expression
Chapter 12: Narrating Shame in Contemporary Mental Distress Memoirs
by British Women
Katrin Röder
Chapter 13: Psychic Relief and Non-Narrative Configurations in
Graphic Memoirs about Mental Health
Lasse R. Gammelgaard
Chapter 14: Memory is a Strange Thing: Science Fiction, Trauma and
Time in Arrival
Christoph Singer
Index
Jarmila Mildorf is Associate Professor for English Literary and
Cultural Studies at Paderborn University, Germany. She is a member
of the International Society for the Study of Narrative, the
European Narratology Network, the International Network for Address
Research, and the German Network for Narrative Medicine, on the
advisory board of the research center Narrare, and co-editor of the
book series Narratives and Mental Health (Brill)
and the Romanian journal Eon.
Elisabeth Punzi is a licensed psychologist and Associate Professor
at the Department of Social Work, and Centre for Critical Heritage
Studies, Gothenburg University. Her research includes critical
perspectives on diagnostic systems and established treatment
methods and the prerequisites for providing client-centered
care.
Christoph Singer is Professor for British and Anglophone Cultural
Studies in the Department of British Literary and Cultural Studies
at the University of Innsbruck, Austria. He has published
anthologies on intersections of Middlebrow & Modernism, the
iconography of Dante & Milton, and on spaces of Well-Being. His
second book discusses the temporality of narratives in times of
crisis, particularly the experience of existential waiting.
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