758
Views
17
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Images of addiction and recovery: An interpretative phenomenological analysis of the experience of addiction and recovery as expressed in visual images

&
Pages 313-322 | Published online: 29 Sep 2010

References

  • Biernacki P. Pathways from heroin addiction: Recovery without treatment. Temple University Press, Philadelphia, PA 1986
  • Bolger N, Davis A, Rafaeli E. Diary methods: Capturing life as it is lived. Annual Review of Psychology 2003; 54: 579–616
  • Broadbent E, Ellis CJ, Gamble G, Petrie KJ. Patients’ drawings illustrate psychological and functional status in heart failure. Journal of Psychosomatic Research 2007; 63: 525–532
  • Cain C. Personal stories: Identity acquisition and self-understanding in Alcoholics Anonymous. Ethos 1991; 19: 210–253
  • Cook C. The Minnesota Model in the management of drug and alcohol dependency: Miracle, method or myth? Part I. The philosophy and the programme. British Journal of Addiction 1988; 83: 625–634
  • Cross K, Kabel A, Lysack C. Images of self and spinal cord injury: Exploring drawing as a visual method in disability research. Visual Studies 2006; 2: 183–193
  • Davis D, Jansen G. Making meaning of Alcoholics Anonymous for social workers: Myths, metaphors, and realities. Social Work 1998; 43: 169–182
  • Fainsilber L, Ortony A. Metaphorical uses of language in the expression of emotions. Metaphor and Symbolic Activity 1987; 2: 239–250
  • Fountain J, Griffiths P, (1998). Synthesis of qualitative research in the European Union. Retrieved from http://qed.emcdda.eu.int/resources/synthesis/synthesis.shtml (updated by Jane Fountain in 2000)
  • Frith H, Harcourt D. Using photographs to capture women's experiences of chemotherapy: Reflecting on the method. Qualitative Health Research 2007; 17: 1340–1350
  • Gillies V, Harden A, Johnson K, Reavey P, Strange V, Willig C. Painting pictures of embodied experience: The use of nonverbal data production for the study of embodiment. Qualitative Research in Psychology 2005; 2: 199–212
  • Gillies V, Willig C. ‘You get the nicotine and that in your blood’: Constructions of addiction and control in women's accounts of cigarette smoking. Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology 1997; 7: 285–301
  • Goldschmidt G. The backtalk of self-generated sketches (visual and spatial reasoning in design). Design Issues 2003; 19: 72–88
  • Granfield R, Cloud W. The elephant that no one sees: Natural recovery among middle-class addicts. Journal of Drug Issues 1996; 26: 45–61
  • Guillemin M. Understanding illness: Using drawings as a research method. Qualitative Health Research 2004; 14: 272–289
  • Harré R. Personal being: A theory for individual psychology. Blackwell, Oxford 1983
  • Jensen G. Storytelling in Alcoholics Anonymous: A rhetorical analysis. Southern Illinois University Press, Carbondale, IL 2000
  • Kearney KS, Hyle AE. Drawing out emotions: The use of participant-produced drawings in qualitative inquiry. Qualitative Research 2004; 4: 361–382
  • Kellogg S. Identity and recovery. Psychotherapy: Theory, Research, Practice, Training 1993; 30: 235–244
  • Kirmayer L. The body's insistence on meaning: Metaphor as presentation and representation in illness experience. Medical Anthropology Quarterly 1992; 6: 323–346
  • Koski-Jännes A. Social and personal identity projects in the recovery from addictive behaviours. Addiction Research and Theory 2002; 10: 183–202
  • Lakoff G, Johnson M. Metaphors we live by. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, IL 1980
  • Larkin M, Griffiths MD. Experiences of addiction and recovery: The case for subjective accounts. Addiction Research and Theory 2002; 10: 281–311
  • Lyddon W, Clay A, Sparks C. Metaphor and change in counseling. Journal of Counseling and Development 2001; 79: 269–274
  • Marlatt G, Gordon JE. Relapse prevention: Maintenance strategies in the treatment of addictive behavior. Guilford Press, New York, NY 1985
  • McCrady BS. Alcoholics Anonymous and behavior therapy: Can habits be treated as diseases? Can diseases be treated as habits?. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 1994; 62: 1159–1166
  • McIntosh J, McKeganey N. Addicts’ narratives of recovery from drug use: Constructing a non-addict identity. Social Science and Medicine 2000; 50: 1501–1510
  • McIntosh J, McKeganey N. Identity and recovery from dependent drug use: The addict's perspective. Drugs: Education, Prevention and Policy 2001; 8: 47–59
  • Miller R, Kurtz E. Models of alcoholism used in treatment: Contrasting AA and other perspectives with which it is often confused. Journal of Studies on Alcohol 1994; 55: 159–166
  • Neale J, Allen D, Coombes L. Qualitative research methods within the addictions. Addiction 2005; 100: 1584–1593
  • Pink S. The future of visual anthropology: Engaging the senses. Routledge, New York, NY 2005
  • Potter J, Hepburn A. Qualitative interviews in psychology: Problems and possibilities. Qualitative Research in Psychology 2005; 2: 281–307
  • Radley A, Chamberlain K. Health psychology and the study of the case: From method to analytic concern. Social Science and Medicine 2001; 53: 321–332
  • Radley A, Taylor D. Remembering one's stay in hospital: A study in photography, recovery and forgetting. Health: An Interdisciplinary Journal for the Social Study of Health, Illness and Medicine 2003a; 7: 129–159
  • Radley A, Taylor D. Images of recovery: A photo-elicitation study on the hospital ward. Qualitative Health Research 2003b; 13: 77–99
  • Reavey P, Johnson K. Visual approaches: Using and interpreting images. Sage handbook of qualitative research in psychology, C Willg, W Stainton-Rogers. Sage, London 2008; 296–314
  • Reinarman C. Addiction as accomplishment: The discursive construction of disease. Addiction Research and Theory 2005; 13: 307–320
  • Rhodes T, Moore D. On the qualitative in drugs research: Part 1. Addiction Research and Theory 2001; 9: 279–297
  • Rødner S. “I am not a drug abuser, I am a drug user”: A discourse analysis of 44 drug users’ construction of identity. Addiction Research and Theory 2005; 13: 333–346
  • Rolfe A, Orford J, Dalton S. Women, alcohol and femininity: A discourse analysis of women heavy drinkers’ accounts. Journal of Health Psychology 2009; 14: 326–335
  • Rose G. Visual methodologies: An introduction to the interpretation of visual materials. Sage, London 2001
  • Sellner E. Step five: Telling my story. Hazelden, Minneapolis 1981
  • Shinebourne P, Smith JA. Alcohol and the self: An interpretative phenomenological analysis of the experience of addiction and its impact on the sense of self and identity. Addiction Research and Theory 2009; 17: 152–167
  • Smith JA. Reflecting on the development of interpretative phenomenological analysis and its contribution to qualitative research in psychology. Qualitative Research in Psychology 2004; 1: 39–54
  • Smith JA, Flowers P, Larkin M. Interpretative phenomenological analysis: Theory, method and research. Sage, London 2009
  • Stall R, Biernacki P. Spontaneous remission from the problematic use of substances: An inductive model derived from a comparative analysis of the alcohol, opiate, tobacco, and food/obesity literatures. The International Journal of the Addictions 1986; 21: 1–23
  • Swora MG. The rhetoric of transformation in the healing of alcoholism: The twelve steps of Alcoholics Anonymous. Mental Health, Religion and Culture 2004; 7: 187–209
  • Temple M, McVittie C. Ethical and practical issues in using visual methodologies: The legacy of research-originating visual products. Qualitative Research in Psychology 2005; 2: 227–239
  • Weber S, Mitchell C. That's funny, You don’t look like a teacher: Interrogating images, identity and popular culture. Falmer Press, London 1995
  • White W, (2002). An addiction recovery glossary: The languages of American communities of recovery. Retrieved from www.facesandvoicesofrecovery.org, 2002 - bhrm.org

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.