Title: Everyday heroism in biographical studies
1Everyday heroism in biographical studies
- seeQualitative Sociology Review 2005 Volume I
Issue 2 - Precariousness of everyday heroism. A
biographical approach to life politics
Pirkkoliisa Ahponen
2Explaining individual life through social
strategies
- Life-courses are interpreted coherently through
narrative structures - Personally experienced life-strategies are
increasingly connected by means of reflexivity
- on advices, norms and rules legalised reformed
and regulated by counselling life-expertise - Denzin The social structure is not directly
illustrated in an individual life - How far the transitions in individual life and
individual autobiographies can be interpreted by
following social framing strategies (forming
categories, typologies, classifications)?
3The outsiders strategy
- The outsiders strategy in the interpretation
- To look carefully what social changes happened
simultaneously with certain individual
experiences - To translate the individual to social
experience to see the strategic changes (e.g.
common experiences on wartimes, recessions etc.) - To describe structural changes through economic
situations, work conditions or educational
opportunities - as individually experienced - Is the principal aim then to explain theoretical
models of socialisation either for the purposes
of social governance or for the purposes of
proactive strategic visions
4What is everyday and what is heroism?
- Everyday life is filled with common-sense
routines, taken-for-granted practices and seen
but not noticed aspects (Featherstone) - Everyday episodes are told as narrative
constructions - What is worth of telling?
- Heroic moments are prospective situations
- Heroic life is marked by excitement,
extraordinary deeds, virtuosity, courage,
endurance and specific qualifications - The heroic order is distanced from everyday order
by challenges, risks and struggles in order to
achieve extraordinary goals - A hero has specific capacities for fulfilling
difficult tasks - Heroes are prototypes of winners marking the
success in the life-strategies
5Heroic deeds and everyday heroism
- Heroic stories are constructed according to a
specific genre - The focus is on the success of a person who can
solve problems (difficult tasks, brave deeds,
dilemmas) - to be competitive, to make proper choices -
egoism (ego-centrism) - What is the role of Fortune in heroic deeds
- What is everyday heroism?
- Everyday heroism is hidden in a liminality
between victories and defeats included in
life-processes - Everyday heroism is the dialectical tension
between alienation and self-liberation
(Gottdiener 1996) - Everyday heroism is a fragile phenomenon
understandable only in precarious situations that
pass by momentarily - How to clear up difficult life problems?
6The motivation of everyday heroism
- The personal story may give strength for someone
else who has comparatively similar experiences - Self-respect is resulted by unselfish
(altruistic) deeds - Overcoming of personal difficulties is a
necessary precondition of everyday heroism - People act spontaneously in sudden moments of
accidents or when trying to survive through big
catastrophes - Spontaneous help the idea of the first aid -
reaction without thinking the price of the
interaction - Capacity to react in a correct way in a suddenly
met challenging situation
7Caring sociality
- Caring sociality aims to respond to the needs of
others who are dependent from the care-givers - The problems of patronage an guardianship
- The ideals of equal responsibility
- Dependency on caring of the nearest people in
precarious life conditions - Morality as the contents of care demands that
needs of the other are taken into consideration
in the normal order of quotidian life without
conscious striving for great fame or honoured
self (see Bauman Postmodern Ethics)
8Charity and helpfulness
- When the basic needs of the other are cared
according to moral principles they are taken into
consideration without asking the costs - Charity contains a tendency to see the other
from up to down - a person puts him/herself on the upper ladder as
compared the other - Self-sacrificing sweeps morality away
9The politics of self (Giddens)
- Self-identity is produced as a reflexive
achievement - shaped by producing the life-course as a
narrative construction by constructing heroic
biographies - Finding the internalized other inside me by
following the life-path aiming to the better self - Individuals who succeed in fulfilling the
life-political (heroic) requirements in
late-modern society are heroes of the competitive
democracy - Moral responsibility is tested by comparing
social capacities with egoism and narcissism - Discursive construction of the self is a symbolic
journey from alienation through social
discrimination and the experiences on situations
of marginality to a heroic effort of mastering
ones own life
10Reflective narration of heroes of ones own life
- How the most significant changes in the society
(labelling epochs) are reflected in individual
life-stories - to categorise generational cohorts
- to typify institutionalised age markers
- How the social context of life is reflexively
filtered into individual experiences - to see the figuration of sociality through
individually experienced episodes - to reflect the individually experienced aspects
of heroism and altruism to the back-side mirror
of society - People give coherence their life when they tell
themselves as heroes of their own life (what are
the key-experiences) - Beck biographical life-patterns are tending to
become increasingly institutionalised, and
therefore directed outside the subject - I know that I am alive when being visible as
connected to the network of communication
11Studying once discriminated everyday heroes
from autobiographies and newspaper scraps
- To see how sociality is produced and interpreted
by overcoming personal difficulties during the
life-process - To see structural changes in the recent society
through individual life-stories - To see how personal experiences of discrimination
and emancipation are related to the increasing
well-being in society as framed by the ideology
of the struggle on success and fears of personal
losses
12Studying once discriminated heroes
- Interviews in two newspapers
- Invitation to write autobiographies with the
rubric Once discriminated, incipient heroes - Everyday heroism is seen as a process which
results self-respect because of altruistic deeds - The research problem can experiences of social
discrimination, marginality and exclusion be
taken into consideration when interpreting
biographical narratives? - The starting point Every narrator of an
autobiography is the hero or the heroine of his
or her own life - Both personal gains and losses are meaningful as
life-experiences - The self as an agent is constructed when
problematic experiences and challenges
(difficulties, personal turning points, moments
of resignation) are described and interpreted
13The contents of the data
- 12 autobiographies, eight from women, four from
men - The longest one 130 pages
- The shortest miniature stories 2-3 pages
- 8 self-publications (one written by a women,
seven written by men one womans story written
by her husband) - Some other contacts (letters, e-mail messages)
- accompanying notes this invitation was remarked
with pleasure - Most of the authors were in the late-middle-age
14The analysis
- Only non-publishes autobiographies, written as
motivated by the invitation, were taken to be
analysed and used as a data for the article - The research problem was restructured
- The focus was shifted from discriminated heroes
of their own life to the problem of everyday
heroism - One (male) author was chosen as a key informant
- The narrative of this case (the pseudonym Urho)
was reflected with the experiences described in
other stories as well as with the general
description of changes of society in his
life-time.
15Reflexive interpretation of life-stories
- Hopes, dreams, fears and frustrations included in
life-stories are reflected in sensitive ways - Key episodes are tightly described turning points
- Social relations (love, intimate relations,
marriage, parenthood) are tested through the
self-respect - - My only way to cope with myself was the
marriage, - - At last I am independent
- - I felt that I never existed
- - In the nearest future I will cure my weak
self-confidence which is related to my dependence
on the family and friends - - My husband needed my support to be able to
discharge himself from me. this break-away hurt
me so deeply that I became able to meet the
challenge to create my own life
16Life-political individualisation and
self-actualisation
- Reflexive life-capacity is used for narrating
ones life in an interpretative way - A tendency toward life-political
individualisation fits well in with the
late-modern self-actualisation - The self is a life-long production
- How to live a better life or how to manage the
life-construction - A person who can deal with his/her emotions
consciously learns to master itself and know how
to narrate life (make a story) interpretively to
present him-/herself as a heroic figure - How to narrate an other (the past me) as an
estranged form as distinguished from the
present subject (I)
17The postmodern society of individuals
competitive demands for consuming ourselves
- Competition on heroic status among fellowmen
- Overproduction of popular heroes in the media
society - Increasing consumption of stories of ordinary
heroes in media publicity - Public confession of personal secrets and
intimate problems has a special demand, reasoned
by the needs of the audience - Narrative-like biographies as useful material for
life-political programs and procedures - Everyday life is more an more a matter of
choices, negotiations, and personal decisions - Demands of personal advices, norms and rules to
be coded, regulated and reformed by counselling
experts for everyday purposes - What happens if the individual choices for
personally good life are responsibilities of
anybody
18The problem of silent writing
- A tendency toward life-political
individualisation fits well in with the
late-modern self-actualisation - to shape oneself
as a heroic figure - Telling of ones story is an emancipating act
(empowerment)? to produce an enabling subject - Self-actualization is needed to protect the
author from outside attacks - Everyday heroism when not self-centred is not
aiming for consciously reflective production of
the self - Silent episodes during which a person turns
unselfishly toward the Other moral process of
being for the other - How to tell about ambivalent and embarrassing
experiences as an author of the autobiography
(without shame) - How can we describe the silent moments - behind
the veil - When an old man is aware the pain of his wife,
he feels this pain in himself
19Precarious everyday heroism
- Velvet-dependency (Bauman) soft means of emotion
management in social interactions - Everyday heroism is precarious because it is
almost invisible and seen in almost unnoticed
processes - We cannot operate in egocentric ways to produce
everyday heroism - The aspect of care for the other has to be taken
carefully into consideration when dealing with
the problem of everyday heroism - The politics of recognition respect for equal
rights of another