This chapter is found in the recently published volume Sport, Mental illness and Sociology edited by Michael Atkinson. It draws on qualitative data and observations from a range of projects seeking to use football to support mental health recovery. The authors conceptualise recovery as a fluid ongoing process that while supporting individuals to manage and deal with mental illness, may not result in the reduction or remission of clinical symptoms. The research discussed in the chapter is drawn from interviews with male participants aged 18–40 years, who participated in four different football and mental health projects. The chapter outlines three key ways in which participants perceived that football contributes positively to their recovery. Participants discuss football as providing a “safe space,” free from stigma, and as a setting where they can develop productive and engaging social relationships with medical professionals, support staff, coaches, and peers. Finally, they perceive football as a context in which they can begin to rework and redefine their identities, to move away from identities constructed around illness and vulnerability. The chapter concludes by considering both the value and limitations of football as a mechanism for supporting recovery.
Ruth Jeanes, Ramón Spaaij, Jonathan Magee, (2018), Football, Healing, and Mental Health Recovery, in Michael Atkinson (ed.) Sport, Mental Illness, and Sociology (Research in the Sociology of Sport, Volume 11) Emerald Publishing Limited, pp.161 - 176
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