1. Embodiment and the foundation of biographical disruption.
- Author
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Engman, Athena
- Subjects
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TRANSPLANTATION of organs, tissues, etc. , *CHRONIC diseases , *HEART transplantation , *INTERVIEWING , *KIDNEY transplantation , *LIVER transplantation , *LUNG transplantation , *PHENOMENOLOGY , *POSTOPERATIVE period , *ACTIVITIES of daily living , *LABELING theory , *PHYSICAL activity , *HEALTH & social status , *ATTITUDES toward illness , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Abstract The concept of biographical disruption has now enjoyed nearly 40 years of use in medical sociology. This paper argues that taking an embodied approach to biographical disruption helps to explain the concept's enduring efficacy. Drawing on the work of Maurice Merleau-Ponty and contemporary theories of embodiment inspired by his phenomenology, this paper advances that biographical disruption involves, in the first instance, a disruption to the ability to enact an embodied orientation towards the world. Biographical disruption does not, from this perspective, result from illness as such, but from the ways that illness impinges on one's physical ability to engage with daily life. This paper examines the experiences of solid organ transplant recipients for the purpose of shedding light on the conditions under which biographical disruption arises in experience. The analysis includes interviews with 36 post-operative solid organ transplant recipients (heart, liver, lung, and kidney) living in British Columbia or Ontario, Canada. These participants exhibit a wide range of illness experiences, some of which manifest as biographical disruption and others that do not. Tracing the contours of these experiences, this paper argues that the efficacy of biographical disruption for describing the illness experience depends not only on the illness experience but also, fundamentally, on the content of embodiment prior to the onset of that experience. Highlights • The embodiment perspective improves the efficacy of biographical disruption. • The embodied context of an experience structures the illness experience. • Organ transplant recipients present variable experiences of biographical disruption. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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