Abstract
The present study builds on Robinson's (1979) research on Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) in the United Kingdom and his finding that storytelling was an important part of the recovery process in AA. We surveyed 178 members of AA in the United States and asked them how sharing their story of recovery with other alcoholics helped them stay sober. Thematic data analysis reveals storytelling impacts the storyteller in five primary ways: being reminded of a painful past, reinforcing one's recovery, losing the sense of terminal uniqueness, developing one's relationship with one's self, and helping others. Drawing on Fisher's narrative paradigm (1984) and Denzin's (1987a, 1987b) conceptualization of the role of self in the alcoholic's recovery, we argue the stories are a form of self-persuasion that help AA members sustain their sobriety. In recovery, alcoholics develop a better understanding of themselves, replace their alcoholic selves (Denzin, Citation1987a) with recovering selves (Denzin, Citation1987b), and begin to have a sense of themselves that we refer to as the “aspirational self.”
Acknowledgments
The authors thank Dr. Perry Pauley at California State University-Fullerton, who worked with us on the initial design for data collection and thematic analyses.