The Rhetorical Construction of the AD/HD Subject: Managing the Self
ARTICLE
Edward Comstock
Journal of Language, Identity, and Education Volume 14, Number 1, ISSN 1534-8458
Abstract
As the diagnosis of AD/HD becomes more frequent in our schools, and as many individuals across ages embrace an AD/HD identity, scholars need to account for the lived experience of the disorder to understand the meanings individuals give to it. This paper analyses the relationship between ethical practices of self-formation, power, and knowledge (subjectification) in the case of the North American AD/HD subject. Specifically, it builds on recent medicalization scholarship to analyze how individuals make meaning of their disorder and its corresponding drug regimen in light of the "cultural meanings" made available by an increasingly prevalent neuropsychological discourse and ontology. By examining the first-person online accounts of AD/HD subjects from popular Internet message boards, this essay demonstrates how these individuals position themselves on the side of knowledge (the officially sanctioned AD/HD discourse) in creating self-interested and productive identities within newly emergent discursive configurations that diverge from earlier constructions that focused on the eradication of undesirable behaviors. It finds that the AD/HD drug regimen can no longer be understood solely in the terms of deviancy and the "social control" of behavior and both confirms and complicates the argument that these regimens reflect "cosmetic" self-improvement or coping.
Citation
Comstock, E. (2015). The Rhetorical Construction of the AD/HD Subject: Managing the Self. Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 14(1), 1-18. Retrieved March 28, 2024 from https://www.learntechlib.org/p/158924/.
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Keywords
- Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
- Behavior Problems
- computer mediated communication
- content analysis
- Cultural Influences
- Discourse Analysis
- Drug Therapy
- ethics
- Experience
- grounded theory
- Identification (Psychology)
- Individual Characteristics
- Neuropsychology
- Personal Narratives
- Power Structure
- Self Concept
- Symptoms (Individual Disorders)
- Web Sites