Article

Unpacking stored and storied knowledge: elicited biographies of activism in mental health

Details

Citation

Milligan C, Kearns R & Kyle RG (2011) Unpacking stored and storied knowledge: elicited biographies of activism in mental health. Health and Place, 17 (1), pp. 7-16. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthplace.2009.12.016

Abstract
In this paper we consider the potential of autobiographical narratives for accessing ‘storied knowledge’ in research around geographies of health voluntarism. We firstly consider what is meant by elicited autobiography and how the narrative approach has been used in research more broadly. Drawing on fieldwork undertaken in Manchester, UK and Auckland, New Zealand we then demonstrate how this approach has helped us to map out and unpack the career journeys of mental health activists working within and across the voluntary and statutory sectors. Through our autobiographical narratives we illustrate how this approach has enabled us to elicit important insights into the triggers and trajectories underpinning mental health activism and how events and moments in time have provided critical junctures in these trajectories. We consider places as sites of significance in activist career paths; and as central to the researcher-participant gestalt within which the autobiography is elicited and recounted. The autobiographical process, we suggest, offers reflective insights into mental health activism that might not otherwise be gained using more conventional methodologies.

Keywords
Mental Health; Activism; Biography; Narrative; Career Trajectories; Manchester; Auckland; Psychiatry Research; Voluntarism Great Britain; Voluntarism New Zealand; Autobiography; Narration (Rhetoric)

Journal
Health and Place: Volume 17, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Publication date31/01/2011
Publication date online04/01/2010
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/2862
PublisherElsevier
ISSN1353-8292