Saying the word : voice and silence in an autoethnography about chronic illness

dc.contributor.authorRichards, Roseen_ZA
dc.date.accessioned2017-02-03T09:32:14Z
dc.date.available2017-02-03T09:32:14Z
dc.date.issued2016
dc.descriptionCITATION: Richards, R. 2016. Saying the word : voice and silence in an autoethnography about chronic illness. Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus, 49:233-247, doi:10.5842/49-0-660.en_ZA
dc.descriptionThe original publication is available at http://spilplus.journals.ac.za
dc.description.abstractPeople living with chronic illness experience impairment in various ways, not the least of which is how they are sometimes marginalised by the people with whom they interact. Over the last few decades, as social science research has moved away from the biomedical model, research methodologies have been developed to allow the voices of people with illness or disabilities to be heard and not only to be represented by others. However, these methodologies may not go as far in redressing power imbalances as was hoped, and participants’ voices are often still mediated and subjugated to the researcher’s requirements. As a person who has lived with a chronic condition all my life, I am concerned about how I am heard and by whom, as this has often affected my self-perception and sometimes even my safety. I am also concerned about doing violence to those about whom I speak and disempowering them further. My doctoral research concerned the problematic of writing about my own experience of a chronic illness. I chose a methodology, autoethnography, that allowed me to write solely about my own experience. In so doing, I was able to consider the complexity of my own academic and narrative voices, individually and in combination. In this paper I explore the methodological and epistemological concerns around my decision to use autoethnography, as well as the sometimes surprising issues I navigated when doing so. One of these issues was the juxtapositioning of different types of texts I had written. In isolation, some of the texts show a clear influence of the very discourses to which I was trying to provide counter-narratives. When read together with other texts, they reveal a complex web of paradoxes, tensions, and silences, which allowed me to generate new narratives and to question assumptions – my own and other people’s.en_ZA
dc.description.urihttp://spilplus.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/660
dc.description.versionPublisher’s version
dc.format.extent15 pages
dc.identifier.citationRichards, R. 2016. Saying the word : voice and silence in an autoethnography about chronic illness. Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus, 49:233-247, doi:10.5842/49-0-660
dc.identifier.issn2224-3380 (online)
dc.identifier.issn1726-541X (print)
dc.identifier.otherdoi:10.5842/49-0-660
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/100578
dc.language.isoen_ZAen_ZA
dc.publisherStellenbosch University, Department of General Linguistics
dc.rights.holderAuthor retains copyright
dc.subjectChronic illnessen_ZA
dc.subjectChronic conditionen_ZA
dc.subjectNarrativeen_ZA
dc.subjectSilenceen_ZA
dc.subjectVoiceen_ZA
dc.subjectUCTD
dc.titleSaying the word : voice and silence in an autoethnography about chronic illnessen_ZA
dc.typeArticleen_ZA
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