Abstract
Singapore's mental health peer movement is a social movement that encourages persons with psychiatric histories to use their lived experience for the benefit of others. This is a rare state-led intervention designed to empower persons in recovery to advocate for themselves and exercise agency. However, in the context of a depoliticized society such as Singapore, the inherently political nature of this work—to articulate a shared identity, build community and awareness, and press for destigmatization and other forms of support—has become obscured, thereby muting the potential of the peer movement. This article discusses life-writing narratives as an opportunity to advance the re-politicization of mental health stories. I argue from an insider's perspective that life-writing provides an opportunity within Singapore's mental health landscape for a diverse range of stories to be told that may complicate dominant narratives in mental health.
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