Frank A W
University of Calgary.
Qual Health Res. 2000 May;10(3):354-65. doi: 10.1177/104973200129118499.
The legitimacy of an interest in illness narratives that is therapeutic, emancipatory, and pre-occupied with ethics is defended in response to Atkinson's critique of this interest as a blind alley. The value of storytelling as complementary to story analysis is argued, and the importance of recognizing one's own standpoint is emphasized. The conclusion considers how qualitative methods can inform changing relationships between illness, health, medicine, and culture.
针对阿特金森将对疾病叙事的这种兴趣批判为死胡同的观点,一种具有治疗性、解放性且专注于伦理的对疾病叙事的兴趣的合理性得到了辩护。本文论证了叙事作为故事分析补充的价值,并强调了认识自身立场的重要性。结论部分思考了定性方法如何为疾病、健康、医学和文化之间不断变化的关系提供信息。