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2025 (Engelska)Ingår i: Journal of Youth Studies, ISSN 1367-6261, E-ISSN 1469-9680, Vol. 28, nr 3, s. 566-584Artikel i tidskrift (Refereegranskat) Published
Abstract [en]
The paper analyses how the Covid-19 pandemic affected young people’s alcohol-related assemblages, trajectories of becoming and identity claims in Sweden. The data is based on longitudinal qualitative interviews among heavy and moderate drinking young people (n = 23; age range 15–24 years). The participants were interviewed two to three times before the Covid-19 pandemic and once at the end of it, between 2017 and 2021. The analysis draws on actor-network theory and narrative positioning approach. The analysis demonstrates how the lockdown produced trajectories of becoming boring, normal, stress-free, self-caring, self-confident and shielded. In these trajectories, drinking was positioned into relations that either increased young people’s capacities for well-being or decreased them. Due to the lockdown, some participants learnt to be moved by relations that contributed to replace drinking with competing activities, while others experienced that the lockdown made drinking a more attractive activity, turning it into a collective force that helped them to overcome isolation. The results show how drinking is a heterogeneous activity which may increase or decrease young people’s capacities for well-being, depending on what kinds of assemblages and trajectories of becoming it is embedded in.
Nyckelord
Covid-19, qualitative longitudinal data, actor-network theory, narrative positioning theory, trajectories of becoming, identity claims
Nationell ämneskategori
Barn- och ungdomsvetenskap Barn- och ungdomsvetenskap Beroendelära och missbruk
Forskningsämne
sociologi; barn- och ungdomsvetenskap; folkhälsovetenskap
Identifikatorer
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-224048 (URN)10.1080/13676261.2023.2283508 (DOI)001103715100001 ()2-s2.0-85177032512 (Scopus ID)
Forskningsfinansiär
Forte, Forskningsrådet för hälsa, arbetsliv och välfärd, 2016-00313Forte, Forskningsrådet för hälsa, arbetsliv och välfärd, 2020-00457
2023-11-272023-11-272025-09-08Bibliografiskt granskad