Journal
HEALTH
Volume 18, Issue 1, Pages 95-114Publisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/1363459313476967
Keywords
critical; disability; masculinities; muscular dystrophy; youth
Funding
- Canadian Institutes of Health Research [103245] Funding Source: Medline
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Children and youth with progressive conditions are living longer, and there is increased interest in designing programs that will assist them with transitioning to adulthood. Almost none of the transitions research to date, however, has attended to the experiences of disabled boys in becoming men, nor has there been critical conceptual work problematizing notions of normal adulthood or theorizing the complex, diverse, and gendered experiences of transitioning. In this Canadian study, we investigated the intersectionality of gender, disability, and emerging adulthood with 15 young men with Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Participants created audio diaries and photographs that were explored in in-depth interviews. Using a Bourdieusian lens and Arthur Frank's notion of the narrative habitus, we examined how participants re/negotiated identities in everyday practices. Our analysis suggested that disability, masculinities, and generational (life stage) identities intersected through narratives of nondifference, wherein participants worked to establish identities as typical guys. Within limited fields of school and work, participants distanced themselves from the label of disabled and discussed their successes and challenges in terms of normative developmental trajectories. We suggest that the pursuit of normal is reproduced and reinforced in health and social programs and closes off other narratives and possibilities.
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