You realise you are better when you want to live, want to go out, want to see people: Recovery as assemblage
Peer reviewed, Journal article
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Date
2021Metadata
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Original version
Larsen, I. B. Friesinger, J. G. Strømland, M. Topor, A. P. (2021). You realise you are better when you want to live, want to go out, want to see people: Recovery as assemblage. International Journal of Social Psychiatry, 1-8. https://doi.org/10.1177/00207640211019452Abstract
Background: The lack of social and material perspectives in descriptions of recovery processes is almost common in
recovery research.
Aim: Consequently, we investigated recovery stories and how people with mental health and/or addiction challenges
included social and material aspects in these stories.
Method: We conducted focus group and individual interviews. We investigated how the participants narrated their
stories and how they assembled places and people in their recovery stories.
Results: We found that narratives of recovery became assemblages where humans and their environments co-exist and
are interdependent.
Conclusion: As such, narratives about recovery are about everyday assemblages of well-being into which stories of
insecurity are interwoven, without a start or stop point.