Your Own Personal Illness: Interpretation through the Spiritual Malady in Alcoholics Anonymous

Some Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) members conceive of the fundamental problem they share as a “spiritual malady.” Based on fieldwork among three AA groups in Nova Scotia, Canada, this article advances an ethnographic description of the concept. Through a close examination of how the spiritual malady wa...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Ethos
Main Author: Parsons, Alastair (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Wiley-Blackwell 2022
In: Ethos
Further subjects:B private and public symbols
B Addiction
B Selfhood
B Alcoholics Anonymous
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Description
Summary:Some Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) members conceive of the fundamental problem they share as a “spiritual malady.” Based on fieldwork among three AA groups in Nova Scotia, Canada, this article advances an ethnographic description of the concept. Through a close examination of how the spiritual malady was interpreted by my interlocutors, I propose that the concept creates a cultural framework for the articulation of subjectivities and the interpretation of psychologies. I argue that it exists through a reciprocity of private and public meanings that are more the product of interactions between AA members than the learning and repetition of a formal ideology. This analysis becomes a means of exploring the agency of AA members as producers of meaningful representations of the challenges they feel they hold in common.
ISSN:1548-1352
Contains:Enthalten in: Ethos
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1111/etho.12330