"A fine account of experiences of suffering in everyday America
understood as occasions for making meaning."--Arthur Kleinman,
co-editor of "Social Suffering
"An original and compassionate contribution to the study of
human suffering. It describes how people try to make sense of lives
disrupted, and often fragmented, by major crises: stroke, illness,
migration, miscarriage or infertility. Her descriptions of the
narratives and metaphors they use to try to restore the coherence
of their world-view and relationships is both vivid and
readable."--Cecil G. Helman, author of "Culture, Health and
Illness
"Using the methods and perspectives of cultural phenomenology,
and narrative analysis, this powerful and moving work brings new
meanings and understandings to the disruptions, personal
distresses, and emotional crises that occur in daily life.
Disruptions and chaos are part of the human condition. Gay Becker
brilliantly shows how ordinary people address this fact of
life."--Norman Denzin, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
"A remarkable, creative synthesis of up-to-the-minute theories
of symbolic healing and narrative performance by one of
contemporary medical anthropology's most prolific and sophisticated
practitioners. Gay Becker presents many poignant and unforgettable
cases from major ethnographic studies conducted by herself and her
colleagues in the United States on topics including: adaptation to
stroke, meanings of infertility, management of disruptions such as
divorce in mid-life, transitions of the elderly to assisted living,
and multi-ethnic experiences of illness in the health care system.
Becker is a master of life history and life story methods. Her
analyses areimpeccably grounded in first-class ethnographic
research to produce a mature and exciting work that will be read
widely across many disciplines."--Gelya Frank, University of
Southern California
"Though ours is an age of dislocation and uprootedness, the
issue of how human beings negotiate the stony ground between past
and present lives transcends historical and cultural boundaries. In
this illuminating and far-reaching study of disrupted lives, Gay
Becker explores in a variety of critical contemporary settings the
interplay between what people suffer and what they make of their
suffering. Giving voice to the people with whom she worked, and
sensitive to the embodied and dialogic dimensions of human agency,
Becker shows how people variously deploy cultural resources such as
metaphor and narrative to cope with adversity, recover a semblance
of order and continuity, and actively regain a sense of
self-determination."--Michael Jackson, University of Sydney
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