Centre for Cultural Research and Department of Tourism, Leisure, Hotel and Sport Management, Griffith University, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Qual Health Res. 2012 Aug;22(8):1063-72. doi: 10.1177/1049732312443738. Epub 2012 May 18.
Australian mental health services have responded to the problem of depression by adopting an early intervention and recovery orientation. Using qualitative research conducted in Australia with 80 women aged 20 to 75 years, we examine how participants invoked particular metaphors to construct meaning about the gendered experience of depression and recovery. We argue that women's stories of recovery provide a rich source of interpretive material to consider the everyday metaphors of recovery beyond clinical notions and linear models of personal change. We identified key metaphors women drew on to articulate the struggle of self-transformation through depression and recovery: the immobilizing effect of depression, recovery as a battle to control depression, and recovery as a journey of self-knowledge. Our findings might be useful for mental health professionals in a range of clinical contexts to reflect on the power of language for shaping how women interpret their experiences of recovery from depression.
澳大利亚的心理健康服务机构通过采取早期干预和康复导向来应对抑郁问题。我们使用在澳大利亚进行的针对 80 名年龄在 20 至 75 岁之间的女性的定性研究,考察了参与者如何利用特定的隐喻来构建关于抑郁和康复的性别体验的意义。我们认为,女性的康复故事为考虑超越临床概念和个人变化的线性模型的康复的日常隐喻提供了丰富的解释材料。我们确定了女性用来表达通过抑郁和康复进行自我转变的斗争的关键隐喻:抑郁的僵化效应、将康复视为控制抑郁的战斗,以及将康复视为自我认知的旅程。我们的研究结果可能对各种临床环境中的心理健康专业人员有用,使他们反思语言在塑造女性如何解释自己从抑郁中康复的经验方面的力量。