Title of article
Young men in ‘crisis’: attending to the language of teenage boys’ distress
Author/Authors
Carolyn McQueen، نويسنده , , KAREN HENWOOD، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Pages
17
From page
1493
To page
1509
Abstract
The last two decades have seen a changing profile of young male mental health in Britain, including increased suicidal and parasuicidal behaviours. For mental health professionals to respond effectively and appropriately to meet these changing needs there needs to be further theorising and development of knowledge of young menʹs psychological processes and, in particular, how they make sense of their experiences within the cultural context of their lives. By drawing upon contemporary theories of subjectivities, this paper attempts to begin to address some of these issues. It looks in detail at two young menʹs accounts of their experiences of mental health problems. By using narrative, thematic and discourse analyses, the authors consider the cultural concepts the young men draw upon, and the language they use to voice their distress. The paper focuses on how gender and traditional masculinities constrain and influence the young menʹs narratives within the context of their individual life-histories and how these may become problematic for their mental health. The analyses provide a contemporary language-sensitive and culturally-sensitive reading of the young menʹs accounts of mental distress. It highlights how young men may talk about their distress in ways that are not immediately recognisable and extends the knowledge of the contemporary discourses used by young men in British society today. The implications for male subjectivities and mental health and therapeutic engagement are discussed.
Keywords
Mental health , Young men , language , Life-histories , Masculinities , Subjectivities
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Serial Year
2002
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Record number
601175
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