Listening With Feeling: Emotional Labour and Digital Storytelling in Dementia Care Education
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Sunderland, Naomi
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Avieson, Bunty
Giles, Fiona
Joseph, Sue
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Abstract
In this chapter, the authors explore the emotional labor associated with listening to personal stories. They show that using stories of lived experience to change professional practice and service provision is a promising but challenging process, requiring careful thinking through. The authors explain Megan Boler’s concepts of ‘testimonial listening’ and ‘the pedagogy of discomfort’ to think through these processes. They argue that listening to ‘Classic’ digital stories can evoke a range of emotions – not just empathy but sometimes also defensiveness, shame, and/or distress. The authors show the power of personal stories to shock listeners and bring them to a new awareness of others’ lived experiences is often used deliberatively in health care settings. If digital stories stir up emotions, and not always a warm sense of fellow feeling, helping health professionals make sense of their emotional reactions to the testimony of patients is key to changing practices.
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Still Here: Memoirs of Trauma, Illness and Loss
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1st
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© 2019 Taylor & Francis. This is an Accepted Manuscript of a book chapter published by Routledge in Still Here: Memoirs of Trauma, Illness and Loss on 12 April 2019, available online: https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429201707
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Social work
Other language, communication and culture
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Matthews, N; Sunderland, N, Listening With Feeling: Emotional Labour and Digital Storytelling in Dementia Care Education, Still Here: Memoirs of Trauma, Illness and Loss, 2019, 1st, pp. 115-128