Heterogeneities of experience, positionality, and method in user/survivor research

Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 23 (3):229-232 (2016)
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Abstract

Jasna Russo argues powerfully for survivor-controlled narrative research as a counterpoint to ‘conventional narrative research,’ in which a clear dichotomy obtains between the researcher who interprets and the participant whose narrative is interpreted. Russo calls us to an ethic of engagement and a focus on dialogic relationships within the research process as a way to disrupt the potential for ‘epistemic violence’ in conventional narrative research, and toward the development of a survivor owned ‘model of madness.’ Herein I extend the discussion of intersectionality that Russo opened. In particular, I ask: What theoretical resources and scholarship can we draw upon to support the kind of critical...

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