Article published In: Pragmatics & Cognition
Vol. 24:1 (2017) ► pp.119–135
Recovering alcoholic
Competing construals of a socially constructed identity category
Published online: 19 January 2018
https://doi.org/10.1075/pc.16011.wit
https://doi.org/10.1075/pc.16011.wit
Abstract
This paper examines the competing construals of the phrase recovering alcoholic, which, as a Membership Categorization Device (Sacks, Harvey. 1992. Lectures on conversation, vols 1 & 21. Ed. Gail Jefferson. Oxford: Blackwell.), serves to fulfill a commitment to an identity category and at the same time evokes other category-bound activities, often with unintended consequences. Former problem drinkers are routinely referred to by themselves and others as recovering alcoholics, yet they are not ‘recovering’ in the canonical sense of the word, and they participate in a behavior – not drinking – which is a negation of the behavior that originally qualified them as alcoholics. This use of the relatively new identity marker recovering alcoholic may discourage a problem drinker from attempting sobriety, as it implies an unbounded, never-ending period of recovery, unlike recovery from other diseases (and, oddly, unlike the full recovery proffered by Alcoholics Anonymous).
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Data
- 3.Discussion
- 4.Conclusion
- Acknowledgement
- Notes
References
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