The Child’s Experience of Relatives with Mental Health Problems: How Can Middle Grade Authors Combat Stigma?

The effects of the stigmatisation of people with mental health problems (MHPs) should not be underestimated; stigma becomes a barrier to seeking help and can lead to feelings of shame, fear and isolation for children within the family. Through the examination of three Middle Grade (MG) depictions o...

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Main Author: Hannah Durkan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elen Caldecott & Lucy Cuthew 2025-07-01
Series:Leaf Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.library.lancs.ac.uk/lj/article/view/129
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author Hannah Durkan
author_facet Hannah Durkan
author_sort Hannah Durkan
collection DOAJ
description The effects of the stigmatisation of people with mental health problems (MHPs) should not be underestimated; stigma becomes a barrier to seeking help and can lead to feelings of shame, fear and isolation for children within the family. Through the examination of three Middle Grade (MG) depictions of relatives with MHPs – The Rollercoaster Boy by Lisa Thompson, The Tiger who Sleeps Under My Chair by Hannah Foley and Boy in The Tower by Polly Ho-Yen – this article will investigate how MG authors can portray characters with MHPs realistically, compassionately and with the aim to combat stigma. I suggest that using metaphors to describe MHPs can both aid understanding for children and provide a clear separation between the person and their symptoms, thus reducing blame. When stories acknowledge the experience of stigma and confront it directly with empathetic characters who hold alternative viewpoints, the negative stereotypes which young readers are likely to encounter in their lives are directly challenged. I discuss why MHPs must be normalised by providing a wide-range of characters across the MG reading experience. MHPs are common, can affect anyone and are often invisible. In truth, they are simply part of being human.
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spelling doaj-art-d04fe8699efd402cbfa61c5853e73bef2025-08-20T03:29:23ZengElen Caldecott & Lucy CuthewLeaf Journal2753-69202025-07-013110.58091/5af7-9797The Child’s Experience of Relatives with Mental Health Problems: How Can Middle Grade Authors Combat Stigma?Hannah Durkan The effects of the stigmatisation of people with mental health problems (MHPs) should not be underestimated; stigma becomes a barrier to seeking help and can lead to feelings of shame, fear and isolation for children within the family. Through the examination of three Middle Grade (MG) depictions of relatives with MHPs – The Rollercoaster Boy by Lisa Thompson, The Tiger who Sleeps Under My Chair by Hannah Foley and Boy in The Tower by Polly Ho-Yen – this article will investigate how MG authors can portray characters with MHPs realistically, compassionately and with the aim to combat stigma. I suggest that using metaphors to describe MHPs can both aid understanding for children and provide a clear separation between the person and their symptoms, thus reducing blame. When stories acknowledge the experience of stigma and confront it directly with empathetic characters who hold alternative viewpoints, the negative stereotypes which young readers are likely to encounter in their lives are directly challenged. I discuss why MHPs must be normalised by providing a wide-range of characters across the MG reading experience. MHPs are common, can affect anyone and are often invisible. In truth, they are simply part of being human. https://ojs.library.lancs.ac.uk/lj/article/view/129creative writing for young peoplemental health problemsstigmamiddle gradefamily
spellingShingle Hannah Durkan
The Child’s Experience of Relatives with Mental Health Problems: How Can Middle Grade Authors Combat Stigma?
Leaf Journal
creative writing for young people
mental health problems
stigma
middle grade
family
title The Child’s Experience of Relatives with Mental Health Problems: How Can Middle Grade Authors Combat Stigma?
title_full The Child’s Experience of Relatives with Mental Health Problems: How Can Middle Grade Authors Combat Stigma?
title_fullStr The Child’s Experience of Relatives with Mental Health Problems: How Can Middle Grade Authors Combat Stigma?
title_full_unstemmed The Child’s Experience of Relatives with Mental Health Problems: How Can Middle Grade Authors Combat Stigma?
title_short The Child’s Experience of Relatives with Mental Health Problems: How Can Middle Grade Authors Combat Stigma?
title_sort child s experience of relatives with mental health problems how can middle grade authors combat stigma
topic creative writing for young people
mental health problems
stigma
middle grade
family
url https://ojs.library.lancs.ac.uk/lj/article/view/129
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