TY - JOUR
T1 - Membership and Boundary Maintenance in an Online Self-harm Forum
AU - Smithson, J
AU - Sharkey, S
AU - Hewis, E
AU - Jones, RB
AU - Emmens, T
AU - Ford, T
AU - Owens, C
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - In this article we explore how young adults became members and sustained membership in an online self-harm support
forum, SharpTalk. We take a discursive approach to consider resources young people used to establish themselves,
how others responded to their attempts, and how membership categories were developed and applied. Participants
displayed expectations about appropriate ways of discussing self-harm, and about responses and advice. New posters
made reference to other self-harm sites, provided biomedicalized narratives of their “story,” and asked for help in
particular ways. Participants were active in shaping interactions on the forum, requesting input from site moderators,
and challenging each other both on perceived infringements of posting content, and on style of posting pertinent to
membership. On the SharpTalk site, perceived deviance in posting behavior, and also the giving of health care advice, were
most commonly addressed by other young people who self-harmed, rather than by the site moderators. We consider
implications for creating sites that enable young people who self-harm to become members and sustain membership,
and therefore access support.
AB - In this article we explore how young adults became members and sustained membership in an online self-harm support
forum, SharpTalk. We take a discursive approach to consider resources young people used to establish themselves,
how others responded to their attempts, and how membership categories were developed and applied. Participants
displayed expectations about appropriate ways of discussing self-harm, and about responses and advice. New posters
made reference to other self-harm sites, provided biomedicalized narratives of their “story,” and asked for help in
particular ways. Participants were active in shaping interactions on the forum, requesting input from site moderators,
and challenging each other both on perceived infringements of posting content, and on style of posting pertinent to
membership. On the SharpTalk site, perceived deviance in posting behavior, and also the giving of health care advice, were
most commonly addressed by other young people who self-harmed, rather than by the site moderators. We consider
implications for creating sites that enable young people who self-harm to become members and sustain membership,
and therefore access support.
M3 - Article
SN - 1049-7323
VL - 0
JO - Qualitative Health Research
JF - Qualitative Health Research
IS - 0
ER -