324 pages, 6 x 9
Paperback
Release Date:01 Sep 1993
ISBN:9780813519678
CA$50.95 Back Order
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Good Days, Bad Days

The Self and Chronic Illness in Time

Rutgers University Press
Kathy Charmaz has written a compelling book on chronic illness and the effect it has on the self-concepts of those who suffer. It will appeal to anyone facing a long-term problem that seems beyond control. Her work is based on interviews with people suffering from such diseases as cancer, multiple sclerosis, and arthritis, and with their caregivers. Charmaz looks at how these people disclose their illness, how they experience their emotions, and how they manage daily life.

Illness provides a mirror that allows sufferers to see themselves and to become more introspective. As they struggle for control over illness and control over time, they also struggle to control the central images of the self. For example, the chronically ill may situate their self-concepts in the past, present, or future. Charmaz examines under what conditions they situate their self-concepts in each of those timeframes. People may say they live one day at a time. They may bracket certain experiences, such as a heart attack, as timemarkers or turning points in the past. Or they may look ahead to recovering their health. Or ahead to death. 

Charmaz artfully combines near jargon-free analysis with moving stories about how people have experienced illness, usually told in the sufferers' own words. She enters the world of the chronically ill, and brings us into it.

Charmaz transcends the basic issues involved in chronic illness to disclose linkages between one's sense of identity and one's construction of time, which have implications well beyond the realm of health and illness. Contemporary Sociology
A very moving work. It does a marvelous job of allowing the reader to get 'inside' the experience of chronic illness. Lyn H. Lofland,, University of California, Davis
This is an outstanding work. [It] brilliantly conveys an unsurpassable depth of understanding and feeling about the chronically ill. Norman K. Denzin, University of Illinois, Urbana
KATHY CHARMAZ is professor and chair of the department of sociology at Sonoma State University. She is the author of The Social Reality of Death.
Preface
1. Introduction
Part I. Experiencing Chronic Illness
2. Chronic Illness as Interruption
3. Intrusive Illness
4. Immersion in Illness
Part II. Problems in Everyday Life
5. Disclosing Illness
6. Living with Chronic Illness
Part III. Illness, the Self, and Time
7. Time Perspectives and Time Structures
8. Timemarkers and Turning Points
9. The Self in Time
10. Lessons from the Experience of Illness
Epilogue
Methodological Appendix
Notes
Glossary
References
Index
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