Literature DB >> 22763795

'I just want to be normal': An analysis of discourses of normality among recovering heroin users.

Sarah Nettleton1, Joanne Neale, Lucy Pickering.   

Abstract

Research that has explored the lives of men and women recovering from heroin addiction has reported that users often claim that they 'just want to be normal'. Working within a Foucauldian tradition, we argue in this article that the notions of 'governmentality' and the 'norm' are especially apposite to understanding the ubiquity of this aspiration. Here we focus not on the formal institutions of governance that encourage individuals to adhere to social, cultural and political norms, but rather seek to explore recovering users' accounts of normality as they are envisaged and expressed. The reported empirical data were generated from interviews with 40 men and women in England at various stages of recovery from heroin use. The analytic focus is upon the accounts of normality articulated during the interviews in order to identify the ways in which being normal is presented by the participants. In keeping with the methodological tradition of discourse analysis we identify six discursive repertoires of 'normality talk' that transcend the accounts. It is concluded that the negotiation of normality is a precarious route for this social group. Articulations of a desire to be normal are replete with tensions; there are expressions of both resistance and resignation. Despite claims by some contemporary social theorists that diversity is the 'new normality', the accepted bounds of 'difference' are limited for those who have been addicted to heroin.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22763795     DOI: 10.1177/1363459312451182

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health (London)        ISSN: 1363-4593


  9 in total

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Journal:  Med Anthropol Q       Date:  2015-08-18

2.  Managing Stigma: Women Drug Users and Recovery Services.

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Journal:  Fusio       Date:  2017

3.  The becoming of methadone in Kenya: How an intervention's implementation constitutes recovery potential.

Authors:  Tim Rhodes
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2018-02-10       Impact factor: 4.634

Review 4.  The science of recovery capital: where do we go from here?

Authors:  David Best; Emily A Hennessy
Journal:  Addiction       Date:  2021-12-01       Impact factor: 7.256

5.  More Than Just a Break from Treatment: How Substance Use Disorder Patients Experience the Stable Environment in Horse-Assisted Therapy.

Authors:  Ann Kern-Godal; Ida Halvorsen Brenna; Espen Ajo Arnevik; Edle Ravndal
Journal:  Subst Abuse       Date:  2016-10-06

6.  "We're supposed to be a family here": An ethnography of preserving, achieving, and performing normality within methamphetamine recovery.

Authors:  Samuel Brookfield; Lisa Fitzgerald; Linda Selvey; Lisa Maher
Journal:  SSM Popul Health       Date:  2021-11-19

7.  Trust and collaboration between patients and staff in SUD treatment: A qualitative study of patients' reflections on inpatient SUD treatment four years after discharge.

Authors:  Turid Wangensteen; Jacob Hystad
Journal:  Nordisk Alkohol Nark       Date:  2022-04-04

8.  Into the unknown: Treatment as a social arena for drug users' transition into a non-using life.

Authors:  Inger Eide Robertson; Sverre Martin Nesvåg
Journal:  Nordisk Alkohol Nark       Date:  2018-09-26

9.  "I Was Raised in Addiction": Constructions of the Self and the Other in Discourses of Addiction and Recovery.

Authors:  Adams L Sibley; Christine A Schalkoff; Emma L Richard; Hannah M Piscalko; Daniel L Brook; Kathryn E Lancaster; William C Miller; Vivian F Go
Journal:  Qual Health Res       Date:  2020-08-17
  9 in total

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