OTJR: Online Advanced Release
OTJR: Current Issue
OTJR: Back Issues
 
OTJR: Occupation, Participation and Health
 
OTJR: About the Journal
OTJR: Submit a Manuscript
OTJR: Advertising Info
OTJR: Article Reprints
OTJR: Contact Us
Buy a Book
Terms and Conditions
e-contents - Sign up today
Subscribe to OTJR!
AOTF: The American Occupational Therapy Foundation
    

Life Balance: Multidisciplinary Theories and Research


Feature Article
Occupation and Meaning: Narrative in Everyday Activities of Women With Chronic Rheumatic Conditions

OTJR: Occupation, Participation and Health
Vol. 30, No. 2 Spring 2010

By Sissel Alsaker, PhD Candidate OT; Staffan Josephsson, PhD, OTR

Share/Save/Bookmark


ABSTRACT

This ethnographic study explored how processes of meaning take place in the everyday activities of women with chronic rheumatic conditions. Using the French philosopher Ricoeur’s theory of narrative in action, the results showed how processes of meaning were closely linked to action and how the participants enacted possible meaning-related stories in their everyday lives. When enacting meaning, the women linked together events in ways that varied according to the situation. Thus, the enacted processes of meaning were not goal directed or clear but rather complex processes embedded in the women’s network of cultural activity. Sometimes they enacted meaning as part of a complete story; at other times, meaning appeared as fragments with unclear connections. The results were relevant for occupational science and occupational therapy because the women’s everyday activities functioned as interpretative spaces providing opportunities for “trying out” significant issues of meaning and to communicate with their social and material worlds.

AUTHORS

Sissel Alsaker, is PhD Candidate OT, Department of Occupational Therapy, Faculty of Health Science, Sør-Trøndelag University College, Trondheim, Norway. Staffan Josephsson, PhD, OT, is Lecturer, Karolinska Institutet, Division of Occupational Therapy, Department of Neurobiology, Care Science and Society, Stockholm, Sweden.

Originally submitted October 30, 2008. Accepted for publication June 7, 2009. Posted online August 25, 2009.

Address correspondence to Sissel Alsaker at Sissel.Alsaker@hist.no.

doi: 10.3928/15394492-20100312-01

OTJR Copyright and Fair Use Policy
To prevent copyright infringement, we request that authors, subscribers, and those who purchase PDFs through the full-text web site not share the PDFs with outside sources via e-mail. Content of the articles, whether in print or electronic format, remains the property of The American Occupational Therapy Foundation.