'Maybe No One Is Really Crazy, but Everyone Is Just a Little Bit Mad': Framing Experiences of Living with Madness in the TED Talk
In: Canadian Journal of Community Mental Health, Jg. 40 (2021-07-01), S. 71-88
Online
unknown
Zugriff:
This article explores the victimizing experiences of individuals with mental illness using grounded inductive qualitative research methods, by extracting themes from 15 first-hand accounts of living with mental illness delivered on the TED Talks media platform. Emergent themes included (1) victimizing effects of the illness including the effects of medication and the effects of stigma, (2) normalcy, (3) the importance of help-seeking in the process of overcoming obstacles presented by mental health issues, and (4) victimization by others. We conclude that the speakers in our sample, even though they reflect an extraordinary level of functioning, still view themselves as what Becker (1991 [1963]) describes as outsiders, acting as moral entrepreneurs, crusading to normalize madness through a variety of strategies.
Titel: |
'Maybe No One Is Really Crazy, but Everyone Is Just a Little Bit Mad': Framing Experiences of Living with Madness in the TED Talk
|
---|---|
Autor/in / Beteiligte Person: | Morris, Victoria ; Scott, Hannah |
Link: | |
Zeitschrift: | Canadian Journal of Community Mental Health, Jg. 40 (2021-07-01), S. 71-88 |
Veröffentlichung: | Canadian Periodical for Community Studies, 2021 |
Medientyp: | unknown |
ISSN: | 0713-3936 (print) |
DOI: | 10.7870/cjcmh-2021-012 |
Schlagwort: |
|
Sonstiges: |
|