Learning to manage a mental health condition: Caring for the self and ‘normalizing’ identity at work

Author:

Elraz Hadar1ORCID,Knights David12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Lancaster University, UK

2. Oxford Brookes University, UK

Abstract

This article examines the internal and external pressures to ‘normalize’ identity in relation to individuals experiencing mental health conditions (MHCs) at work. The data takes the form of three vignettes extracted from a larger empirical study of 60 interviews. These explore the tensions surrounding identity for individuals experiencing MHCs as well as their interventions to suppress exhibiting the condition. The analysis captures a number of competing meanings surrounding identity in relation to learning to care for the self and managing MHCs. Our contribution is to explore the relationships between learning to care for the self and the performativity of ‘normalizing’ identity in managing MHCs at work. It also provides a potential means of integrating Foucault’s ethics of caring for the self with the literature on identity in ways that can be illuminating for those who manage their MHCs and the demands of work through processes of ‘normalization’. This analysis offers theoretical insights regarding how identity work may be self-defeating in exacerbating MHCs and therefore is of some practical benefit for managers, health professionals and those experiencing MHCs since they often leave individuals with little choice but to intensify their attempts to ‘normalize’ their identities.

Funder

Economic and Social Research Council

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Management of Technology and Innovation,Strategy and Management,General Decision Sciences

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1. Being (Ab)normal – Be(com)ing Other: Struggles Over Enacting an Ethos of Difference in a Psychosocial Care Centre;Journal of Business Ethics;2024-05-15

2. Rethinking Self-Care in Occupational Stress;Handbook of Research on Dissecting and Dismantling Occupational Stress in Modern Organizations;2023-02-20

3. I, strategist;Management Learning;2022-11-11

4. A relational perspective of schizophrenia at work;Equality, Diversity and Inclusion: An International Journal;2022-10-18

5. Known and Unknown Mental Illness: Uncovering the Multiple Routes to Workplace Inequities;Journal of Management;2022-08-25

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