Sporting spinal cord injuries, social relations, and rehabilitation narratives: an ethnographic creative non-fiction of becoming disabled through sport
Working at the intersection of sociology and psychology, the purpose of this paper
was to examine people’s experiences during rehabilitation of being and having
an impaired body as a result of suffering a spinal cord injury (SCI) while playing
sport. Interview data with men (n = 20) and observational data were collected. All
data were analyzed using narrative analyses. To communicate findings in a way
that can incorporate the complexity of results and reach wide audiences, the genre
of ethnographic creative nonfiction was used. The ethnographic creative nonfiction
extends research into issues related to disability, rehabilitation and sporting
injury by 1) producing original empirical knowledge, 2) generating a theoretical
account of human thought, affect and action as emerging not inside the individual
but within social relations and the narratives that circulate between actors, and 3)
capturing the impact of this research.
History
School
Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences
Published in
SOCIOLOGY OF SPORT JOURNAL
Volume
30
Issue
2
Pages
132 - 152 (21)
Citation
SMITH, B., 2013. Sporting spinal cord injuries, social relations, and rehabilitation narratives: an ethnographic creative non-fiction of becoming disabled through sport. Sociology of Sport Journal, 30(2), pp.132-152.