"It Really Just Wrote Itself": Facilitated Creative Writing for People With Chronic Illness

Sara Seerup Laursen, Anders Juhl Rasmussen, Tine Riis Andersen, Helle Ploug Hansen

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Creative writing is increasingly employed in healthcare, but knowledge of patients’ experiences and the benefits of creative writing is limited. This chapter presents findings from a qualitative evaluation of an intervention offering creative writing workshops to people with chronic illnesses in Denmark. The purpose was to assess how facilitated creative writing can benefit people in rehabilitation. Data were produced through an ethnographic fieldwork at four creative writing workshops, and the analysis was based on theories of agency. Under the theme “the participants’ experiences of performing creative writing and its benefits,” three subthemes were identified: 1) being guided by the pen, 2) providing food for thought, and 3) the written text as a medium. Participants experienced that their texts gained agency. The texts stimulated reflection and inspired meaningful conversations with relatives. The authors conclude that facilitated creative writing benefits participants’ rehabilitative efforts by instigating a process potentially leading to reconfigurations of the writer’s self.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationGlobal Perspectives on Probing Narratives in Healthcare
EditorsTeresa Casal, Maria de Jesus Cabral
Place of PublicationHershey
PublisherIGI global
Publication dateJun 2023
Pages97-112
Chapter7
ISBN (Print)9781668480649
ISBN (Electronic)9781668480656
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2023

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