| Literature DB >> 35599585 |
Carol Tishelman1,2, Johanna L Degen3, Sofía Weiss Goitiandía4, Max Kleijberg5, Andrea Kleeberg-Niepage3.
Abstract
In this article, we explore the perspectives of 13-15-year-olds living in Sweden about the first wave of the Covid-19 pandemic, through inductive analysis of 187 of their drawings. Through reconstructive serial picture analysis, three types of meaning were derived: (1) A new normal in dystopian scenery points to the disruption of daily life and development of new praxis and meaning in a context of threat and restriction; (2) Disrupted relationships refers to these adolescents' self-portrayal as solitary, without adult guidance or friends prominent; and (3) Negative emotions and compliant behaviors addresses a range of negative emotions and expressions of loss with few proactive strategies illustrated. General existential distress appears in these drawings, seemingly compounded by both developmental stage and other factors in addition to the pandemic context. Drawings suggest a restricted repertoire of ways of dealing with challenges confronting these adolescents, who seemed to feel left to their own resources.Entities:
Keywords: adolescents, youth, young adults; community and public health; interdisciplinary; lived experience; qualitative methods: arts, art-based research; scandinavia
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35599585 PMCID: PMC9350847 DOI: 10.1177/10497323221101978
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Qual Health Res ISSN: 1049-7323
Figure 1.Three-step approach to analysis based on Panofsky as applied here.
Figure 2.Example of the first two analytic steps for one picture.
Figure 3.(Data set ref. no. 857). 13-year-old girl, May 2020.
Figure 4.(no. 869). 14-year-old girl, May 2020.
Figure 5.(no. 680). 15-year-old girl, May 2020.
Figure 6.(no. 684). 14-year-old boy, June 2020.
Figure 7.(no. 290). 14-year-old girl, May 2020.
Figure 8.(no. 913). 14-year-old boy, May 2020.