1. Coping, Community and Fighting Stereotypes: An Exploration of Multidimensional Social Capital in Personal Blogs Discussing Mental Illness
- Author
-
Sarah Smith-Frigerio
- Subjects
Coping (psychology) ,Health (social science) ,Blogging ,050801 communication & media studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0508 media and communications ,Adaptation, Psychological ,Cognitive level ,medicine ,Humans ,030505 public health ,Mental Disorders ,Communication ,05 social sciences ,Social Support ,Cognition ,Mental illness ,medicine.disease ,Institutional level ,Mental health ,Social relation ,Mental Health ,Social Capital ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Social capital - Abstract
Social capital has been identified as one of the ways in which mental health concerns may be mitigated - by ensuring that systems are in place at the micro (cognitive), meso (social interaction), and macro (institutional) levels to support individuals as they seek assistance with and recovery from mental health concerns. One area that deserves further research, however, is how social capital is created communicatively online for these purposes. This study outlines the creation of social capital through interviews with five personal bloggers, analysis of six additional personal blogs with mental health content, and analysis of 878 reader comments to blog posts. Social capital creation is found in three levels, with: (1) coping with mental illness present at the cognitive level, (2) fostering supportive community at the social interaction level, and (3) fighting against stereotypes at the institutional level.
- Published
- 2019