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Men, sport, and spinal cord injury: an analysis of metaphors and narrative types
- Authors:
- SMITH Brett, SPARKES Andrew C.
- Journal article citation:
- Disability and Society, 19(6), October 2004, pp.613-626.
- Publisher:
- Taylor and Francis
This article draws upon life history data from a small group of men who have experienced spinal cord injury (SCI) through playing the sport of rugby union football and now define themselves as disabled. The salient and most common metaphors used by the men in telling their stories post SCI, and the manner in which this is shaped by three narrative types, is focused upon in detail. The implications of this dynamic process for their identity reconstruction as disabled men are considered.
Still lives: narratives of spinal cord injury
- Author:
- COLE Jonathan
- Publisher:
- MIT Press
- Publication year:
- 2004
- Pagination:
- 330p.,bibliog.
- Place of publication:
- London
The author wanted to find out about living in a wheelchair, without having what he calls "the doctor/patient thing" intervene. He has done this by asking people with spinal cord injuries the simple question of what it is like to live without sensation and movement in the body. If the body has absented itself, where does the person reside? He describes his method in the first chapter: "I have gone to people, not with a white coat or a stethoscope...[but] to listen to their lives as they express them," and it is the narratives of twelve people with spinal cord injuries that form the heart of the book. The twelve people with tetraplegia (known as quadriplegia in the US) or paraplegia whose stories he tells testify to similar impairments but widely differing experiences. The author employs their individual responses to shape the book into six main sections: "Enduring," "Exploring," "Experimenting," "Observing," "Empowering," and, finally, "Continuing." Each concludes with a commentary on the broader issues raised. The book moves from a view of impairment as tragedy to reveal the possibilities and richness of experience available to those living with spinal injuries. In exploring the creative and imaginative adjustments required to construct a "still life," it makes a plea for the able-bodied to adjust their view of this most profound of impairments.