The Long or the Post of It?

dc.bibliographicCitation.firstPage3
dc.bibliographicCitation.issue1
dc.bibliographicCitation.lastPage20
dc.bibliographicCitation.volume46
dc.contributor.authorCheston, Katharine
dc.contributor.authorCenedese, Marta-Laura
dc.contributor.authorWoods, Angela
dc.date.accessioned2025-03-14T18:09:10Z
dc.date.available2025-03-14T18:09:10Z
dc.date.issued2023
dc.date.updated2025-02-17T15:20:22Z
dc.description.abstractLong COVID affects millions of individuals worldwide but remains poorly understood and contested. This article turns to accounts of patients’ experiences to ask: What might narrative be doing both to long COVID and for those who live with the condition? What particular narrative strategies were present in 2020, as millions of people became ill, en masse, with a novel virus, which have prevailed three years after the first lockdowns? And what can this tell us about illness and narrative and about the importance of literary critical approaches to the topic in a digital, post-pandemic age? Through a close reading of journalist Lucy Adams’s autobiographical accounts of long COVID, this article explores the interplay between individual illness narratives and the collective narrativizing (or making) of an illness. Our focus on temporality and suffering knits together the phenomenological and the social with the aim of opening up Adams’s narrative and ascertaining a deeper understanding of what it means to live with the condition. Finally, we look to the stories currently circulating around long COVID and consider how illness narratives—and open, curious, patient-centered approaches to them—might shape medicine, patient involvement, and critical medical humanities research.
dc.description.sponsorshipWellcome Trusthttp://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100010269
dc.description.sponsorshipKoneen Säätiöhttp://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100005781
dc.identifier.doi10.1007/s10912-023-09824-y
dc.identifier.urihttp://resolver.sub.uni-goettingen.de/purl?fidaac-11858/3447
dc.language.isoeng
dc.relation.issn1041-3545
dc.relation.journalJournal of Medical Humanities
dc.rightsL::CC BY 4.0
dc.subject.ddcddc:070
dc.subject.fieldenglishstudies
dc.subject.fieldmediastudies
dc.titleThe Long or the Post of It?
dc.title.alternativeTemporality, Suffering, and Uncertainty in Narratives Following COVID-19
dc.typearticle
dc.type.versionpublishedVersion
dspace.entity.typePublication

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