Layne L L
Department of Science and Technology Studies, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA.
Med Anthropol Q. 1996 Dec;10(4):624-56. doi: 10.1525/maq.1996.10.4.02a00130.
In this at once biographical and autobiographical piece (cf. Shapiro 1988), I describe the processes of "knowledge-making" of one neonatal intensive care parent. In particular, I investigate the ways that narratives of linear progress informed my efforts to understand my son's condition and future prospects, that is, to engage in lay prognostication. In examining and comparing the three metaphors most commonly used to describe my son's changing condition-roller coaster, graduation, and course-I explore how the discrepancy between narratives of linear progress and the complex and volatile condition of many premature and/or critically ill babies is discursively managed in a neonatal intensive care unit.
在这篇兼具传记与自传性质的文章中(参见夏皮罗,1988年),我描述了一位新生儿重症监护患儿家长的“知识构建”过程。具体而言,我探究了线性进步叙事如何影响我理解儿子病情及未来前景的努力,即如何进行外行的病情预测。在审视和比较最常用于描述我儿子病情变化的三个隐喻——过山车、毕业和旅程时,我探讨了在新生儿重症监护病房中,如何通过话语处理线性进步叙事与许多早产和/或危重症婴儿复杂多变病情之间的差异。