The stories in Narrating Estrangement: Autoethnographies of Writing Of(f) Family demonstrate the pain, anguish, and even relief felt by those who contemplate estranging or who are estranged, whether by choice or circumstance.
Auteur
Lisa P. Z. Spinazola is a visiting instructor at the University of South Florida. She uses autoethnography and narrative inquiry to research trauma, grief, family relationships, body image, and identity. Her current projects include adapting an in-person pedagogy of care to enhance remote/online learning and navigating persistent pain/health issues. David F. Purnell received his doctorate from the University of South Florida. He is a qualitative researcher whose research interests include shame culture effects on identity, food as communication, queering definitions of family, and ageism in the academy. His publications are mostly based upon an autoethnographic approach.
Texte du rabat
The stories in Narrating Estrangement: Autoethnographies of Writing Of(f) Family demonstrate the pain, anguish, and even relief felt by those who contemplate estranging or who are estranged, whether by choice or circumstance. Despite the social assumptions persisting about the everlasting nature of family relationships, when people make the complicated and often difficult decision to disconnect from family members, they experience shame, stigma, and isolation because of social pressures to maintain those relationships at all costs.
Each contributor uses the act of storytelling and the autoethnographic mode of scholarship and writing to find clarity in their individual, unique, and complex situations. Several authors' explorations restore some of what they have lost through estrangement-such as a sense of identity, emotional health and well-being, and feelings of belonging-due to the breakdowns in social and family support systems meant to be unconditional and "permanent." The stories display the wide array of reasons why family members become estranged, delving into different types of estrangement, permanent and/or intermittent. In doing so, the writers in this book demonstrate that family relationships are neither easily categorized nor neatly ended-their impact on an individual's life continues and changes, even in and through estrangement.
This book adds to the ongoing scholarly conversations about family estrangement for students and researchers interested in autoethnography and qualitative inquiry, in a wide range of disciplines in the social sciences, healthcare, and communication studies.
Contenu
Inroduction
Lisa P. Z. Spanizola and David F. Purnell
Section One: Estrangement due to lingering effects of childhood neglect, abuse, or abandonment
*Lisa P. Z. Spanizola
*David F. Purnell
Sarah LeBlanc
**Section Two: Estrangement due to family secrets, betrayal, or death
*Anonymous (Darren)
*Amy Muckleroy Carwile
*Christine Lewis
Trudi Peterson
**Section Three: Estrangement resulting from the search for identity, belonging, or home
*Andrea M. Bergstrom
*Suzanne Crowley
Chanelle Walker and Julie L. G. Walker
**Section Four: Estrangement initiated by another and out of our hands
*Dawne Fahey
*Fiona Murray
* Colin Whitworth
Conclusion Lisa P. Z. Spanizola and David F. Purnell