2026-04-14T16:05:25Z
2026-03-02
info:eu-repo/date/embargoEnd/2026-09-02
A variety of computer-mediated health support groups populate the internet. The aim of Chapter 5 is to compare the ways to do emotions and to display empathy in two online mental health forums: one dedicated to borderline personality disorder (BPD) and the other to eating disorders (ED). The analysis focuses on the use of the perceptual verb ‘to feel’ in both sites. Two patterns of expression of emotions, related to the particularities of each mental health condition, emerged. For the participants in the ED forum, bodily sensations superseded emotions, to the point that the discursive construction of the self was dependent on their physical perceptions. In the BPD group, emotionally bounded states were the main concern shared by members to relate to each other and to somehow anchor an unstable sense of self. In both communities, feelings and emotions were embedded in empathic displays when providing highly person-centred support.
Capítol o part de llibre
info:eurepo/semantics/publishedVersion
Anglès
Trastorns de la conducta alimentària; Empatia; Trastorns límits de la personalitat; Eating disorders; Empathy; Borderline personality disorder
Cambridge University Press
Reproducció del capítol del llibre publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009368421.005
Capítol del llibre: Alba-Juez, L., & Haugh, M. (Eds.), The Sociopragmatics of Emotion, Cambridge University Press, 2025, [ISBN 9781009368421], pp. 123-148
(c) Cambridge University Press, 2025