Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1893/2057
Appears in Collections:Faculty of Health Sciences and Sport Journal Articles
Peer Review Status: Refereed
Title: Narrative vigilance: the analysis of stories in health care
Author(s): Paley, John
Eva, Gail
Contact Email: j.h.paley@stir.ac.uk
Keywords: explanation
narrative
objective
patient
story
subjective
Nursing Philosophy History
Nurse Midwives
Nursing Care Practice Guideline
Narrative therapy
Issue Date: Apr-2005
Date Deposited: 17-Feb-2010
Citation: Paley J & Eva G (2005) Narrative vigilance: the analysis of stories in health care. Nursing Philosophy, 6 (2), pp. 83-97. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1466-769X.2005.00195.x
Abstract: The idea of narrative has been widely discussed in the recent health care literature, including nursing, and has been portrayed as a resource for both clinical work and research studies. However, the use of the term 'narrative' is inconsistent, and various assumptions are made about the nature (and functions) of narrative: narrative as a naive account of events; narrative as the source of 'subjective truth'; narrative as intrinsically fictional; and narrative as a mode of explanation. All these assumptions have left their mark on the nursing literature, and all of them (in our view) are misconceived. Here, we argue that a failure to distinguish between 'narrative' and 'story' is partly responsible for these misconceptions, and we offer an analysis that shows why the distinction between them is essential. In doing so, we borrow the concept of 'narrativity' from literary criticism. Narrativity is something that a text has degrees of, and our proposal is that the elements of narrativity can be 'sorted' roughly into a continuum, at the 'high narrativity' end of which we find 'story'. On our account, 'story' is an interweaving of plot and character, whose organization is designed to elicit a certain emotional response from the reader, while 'narrative' refers to the sequence of events and the (claimed) causal connections between them. We suggest that it is important not to confuse the emotional persuasiveness of the 'story' with the objective accuracy of the 'narrative', and to this end we recommend what might be called 'narrative vigilance'. There is nothing intrinsically authentic, or sacrosanct, or emancipatory, or paradigmatic about narrative itself, even though the recent health care literature has had a marked tendency to romanticize it.
DOI Link: 10.1111/j.1466-769X.2005.00195.x
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