Original Research

Celebrities and spiritual gurus: Comparing two biographical accounts of kidney transplantation and recovery

Rose Richards
African Journal of Disability | Vol 4, No 1 | a151 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/ajod.v4i1.151 | © 2015 Rose Richards | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 05 August 2014 | Published: 08 May 2015

About the author(s)

Rose Richards, Research and Writing Laboratory, Language Centre, Stellenbosch University, South Africa; Department of Psychology, Stellenbosch University, South Africa

Abstract

Background: As a kidney transplant recipient I have long been exposed to a shortage of renal narratives and to a dominant theme in those that exist: transplant as restitution or redemption. My lived experience has, however, shown me that post-transplant life is more complex. Even after transplantation, chronic kidney disease requires lifelong health care with varying degrees of impairment, resulting in ongoing liminality for those who experience it. Nonetheless, as a
transplant recipient I find the restitution or redemptive narrative pervasive and difficult to escape.
Objective: I examined two seemingly very dissimilar insider renal biographies, Janet
Hermans’s Perfect match: A kidney transplant reveals the ultimate second chance, and Steven Cojocaru’s Glamour, interrupted: How I became the best-dressed patient in Hollywood, to explore how the narrators treat chronic kidney disease and transplantation.
Methods: In addition to a close textual reading of the biographies, I used my own experience of meaning-making to problematize concepts around restitution or redemptive narratives.
Results: I found that the two biographies are, despite appearances and despite the attempts of one author to escape the redemptive form, very much the same type of narrative. The accounts end with the transplant, as is common, but the recipients’ lives continue after this, as they learn to live with their transplants, and this is not addressed.
Conclusions: Emphasising restitution or redemption might prevent an understanding of
post-transplant liminality that has unique characteristics. The narrator evading this narrative form must come to terms with a changed identity and, sometimes, fight to evade the pervasive narratives others impose.

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Crossref Citations

1. Will you give my kidney back? Organ restitution in living-related kidney transplantation: ethical analyses
Eisuke Nakazawa, Keiichiro Yamamoto, Aru Akabayashi, Margie H Shaw, Richard A Demme, Akira Akabayashi
Journal of Medical Ethics  vol: 46  issue: 2  first page: 144  year: 2020  
doi: 10.1136/medethics-2019-105507