Narratives of Self-Harm at School: Identifying Trajectories of Intervention in Educational Contexts


Research Reports

Narratives of Self-Harm at School: Identifying Trajectories of Intervention
in Educational Contexts

Anna Gargiulo* a

[a] Department of Humanities, University of Naples Federico II, Naples, Italy.

Abstract
Recent studies have shown that self-harming behaviour is increasingly widespread among adolescents, in particular at school. However,
educational institutions perceive themselves unable to cope with the phenomenon, searching for protocols and guidelines to improve its
management. Considering schools as useful contexts for intercepting the young malaise, this study aims at exploring the main meanings of
self-harming behaviours made within the educational cultural contexts starting from the student’s narrations, in order to understand the
possible trajectories of practice. In two high schools we have collected 96 narratives of self-harm written by adolescents (mean age 14;
74% females), who have been engaged in non-suicidal self-injury once in their life. The analysis of the narratives, produced with the help of
a software for the automatic qualitative analysis of texts, has allowed to identify four prevalent themes organized into three sense vectors.
The findings highlighted significant gender differences in the representation of the experience of self-harm between males and females, as
well as the importance of meaningful relationships developed in familiar and educational contexts, which may allow the help seeking
process. The emerging of culturally-shared meanings among adolescents within the investigated contexts may allow to think about possible
protocols of preventive and clinical practices in schools.

Keywords: self-harm, narrative, school cultural context, gender, psychodynamic perspective

Europe's Journal of Psychology, 2020, Vol. 16(1), 95–111, https://doi.org/10.5964/ejop.v16i1.1883

Received: 2019-01-18. Accepted: 2019-06-24. Published (VoR): 2020-03-03.

Handling Editor: Vlad Glăveanu, Department of Psychology and Counselling, Webster University Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland

*Corresponding author at: Porta di Massa, 1. 80123 Naples, Italy. E-mail: anna.gargiulo2@unina.it

This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, CC BY 4.0
(https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium,
provided the original work is properly cited.

The self-harming behaviours have been defined as superficial and intentional injuries of one’s body tissue, in-
flicted without conscious suicidal intent and for not socially accepted reasons (Favazza, 1996; Gargiulo et al.,
2014); examples are behaviours such as cutting, burning and scratching the skin.

In recent years we have seen an increase in these behaviours, particularly widespread among the school youth
population (Lewis & Heath, 2015). In particular, recent studies have shown that self-harming behaviours in-
crease in adolescence (Brown & Plener, 2017), and tend to decline in late adolescence (Plener et al., 2015),
with high rates of incidence in pre-adolescence (Brown & Plener, 2017; Heath, Toste, Nedecheva, &
Charlebois, 2006).

Concerning to the gender variable, great part of the literature shows that girls are more likely to implement the
indicated behaviours than males (Bresin & Schoenleber, 2015; Valencia-Agudo et al., 2018), although other
studies show a gender gap, less evident in prevalence (Klonsky, 2011; Sornberger et al., 2012), but linked to

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aetiology, trajectories and contexts (Gargiulo & Margherita, 2014; Whitlock & Rodham, 2013). Significant gen-
der differences have been found with respect to the kind of self-harm (girls mostly resort to cutting), to the in-
jured body parts, to the age of onset (earlier for girls), to the increase in self-harming behaviour and to the suici-
dal ideation in pre-adolescence (Andover et al., 2010; Sornberger et al., 2012), to the access to the request for
help (Heath et al., 2010), as well as to the social dimensions of self-harm (the boys tend to self-harm in group;
Whitlock et al., 2011).

A part of the literature has shown that adolescents who self-harm have difficulty in putting their sufferings into
words and consider self-harm as a means of communication that allows them to share the emotions of anger
and anguish and which allows families and those who surround them to realize how much they were suffering
(Abrams & Gordon, 2003; Crouch & Wright, 2004; Fortune, Sinclair, & Hawton, 2008; Moyer & Nelson, 2007).
In fact, it has been shown that teenagers who self-harm have a poor ability to identify, name and express their
emotions (Gratz, 2007; Paivio & McCulloch, 2004) and they report the affective regulation as the most common
motivation to get injured (Laye-Gindhu & Schonert-Reichl, 2005; Madge et al., 2008; Nock & Prinstein, 2004).
Thus, self-harming behaviour becomes a strategy for the regulation of emotions that replaces the possibility of
expressing negative emotions through language. From this point of view, self-harm has been regarded as a
primitive form of communication (Farber et al., 2007), pre-symbolic state (Gregory & Mustata, 2012), difficulty in
symbolizing and mentalizing affects (Haza & Keller, 2005; Rossouw & Fonagy, 2012). On the other hand, the
adolescence represents a phase of development in which the instinct can physiologically exceed the capacity
of representation of the adolescent, who can resort to acting out as a specific phase mechanism, in which im-
pulsive behaviours are used to express, through the body, emotions that cannot be put into words yet (Blos,
1967).

From a psychoanalytic perspective, the self-harm has been considered as an extreme attempt to search for in-
dividuation through the contact of the body limit (Biven, 1982; Fattori, 2013). Furthermore, the construction of
one’s own identity, as a structuring of a feeling of Self separated from the other, endowed with structure and
boundaries, represents one of the evolutionary tasks of the adolescent process (Blos, 1967). In terms of object
relations, the psychodynamic literature has shown that the conduct of self-harm can fulfil some unconscious
tasks, related to the attempt to separate from the other significant, made possible only by ‘cutting away’ in a
violent way the other lived as living intrusively his own body (Lemma, 2005). Thus, the object is attacked whose
dependence is intolerable, denying its loss. At the same time, the pain for the loss of the bond is experienced
with peaks of despair, performed and evacuated in self-destructive actions (Ruggiero, 2007).

The Behaviours of Self-Harm at School

Starting from the first school study (Ross & Heath, 2002), much of the research aims at investigating self-harm-
ing behaviour in adolescence was carried out in schools (De Leo & Heller, 2004; Hawton et al., 2002; Madge et
al., 2008; O’Connor et al., 2009), showing a prevalence of behaviour between 14% and 20% of high school
students (Laye-Gindhu & Schonert-Reichl, 2005; Ross & Heath, 2002). Recent international studies show an
increase in self-injurious behaviours in schools with a female prevalence (Muehlenkamp et al., 2009): in fact,
18% of teenagers who attend school report to have been severely self-harmed at least once in their lifetime
(Muehlenkamp, Claes, Havertape, & Plener, 2012; Swannell, Martin, Page, Hasking, & St John, 2014). In par-
ticular, in Italy, lifetime prevalence of 42% for self-harming behaviours was observed in a sample of adolescents
from high schools, without substantial gender differences (Cerutti, Manca, Presaghi, & Gratz, 2011).

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However, although self-harming behaviours commonly emerge in the scholastic context, where teachers and
other scholastic professionals often represent the first contact, studies show that the school staff is perceived
as uncertain and impotent in addressing the difficulties associated with these behaviours with students (Berger,
Hasking, & Reupert, 2014). In fact, despite 74% of teachers report to have come across cases of self-harm dur-
ing their working career, perceiving that the behaviour is increasing in schools, 78% of them underestimate the
spread of the same at school (Best, 2004; Heath, Toste, & Bettam, 2006).

Therefore, the need to prepare some clear guidelines for the management of self-harm behaviour at school is
gaining ground. Contemporary literature is questioning the issue and various protocols have been produced
(Bubrick, Goodman, & Whitlock, 2010; Hasking et al., 2016; Toste & Heath, 2010), sensitive to the identification
of self-harming behaviours, to the response of the school staff, to the involvement of parents, to the respect for
the ethical grounds of intervention in educational institutions, as well as to the management of possible phe-
nomena of infection of the conduct at school (Walsh, 2012). However much still needs to be done in order to
intercept the specific needs of teenagers with self-harm, to identify gender differences and to prepare targeted
interventions. On the other hand, the school represents the most suitable context for the prevention of self-
harm (Shaffer & Gould, 2000), since it is possible to get in contact with most adolescents at risk of self-harm,
achieving less stigmatizing interventions than those conducted in specialized clinical centres.

The Elaborative Function of Narrative

Assuming a cultural and semiotic psychology perspective (Salvatore & Freda, 2011; Valsiner & Rosa, 2007),
each semiotic dynamic is considered always a socially distributed and intersubjective process, as well as deep-
ly embodied and affective (Salvatore, 2016; Salvatore & Zittoun, 2011; Valsiner & De Luca Picione, 2017). The
language, as a semiotic mediator, enables to narratively construct one’s own identity and one’s experiences
with others (Salvatore, 2016; Valsiner, 2001; Vygotsky, 1987). In this framework, the narration is a psychologi-
cal, intersubjective and cultural process (Brockmeier, 2000; Bruner, 1990; Schafer, 1992; Spence, 1982) which
allows to construct meaning (Martino, Lemmo, et al., 2019; Neimeyer, Burke, Mackay, & van Dyke Stringer,
2010) and to reconfigure temporal perspectives (Brockmeier, 2000; Martino, Gargiulo, Lemmo, & Margherita,
2019), supporting processes of transformation and elaboration of traumatic experiences (Margherita, Boursier,
Gargiulo, & Nicolò, 2017; Valsiner, 2007). During their lifetime, individuals constantly re-configures the narration
of their experiences contextually, within a recursive, open, intransitive cycle in mediating self-other-world (De
Luca Picione, 2015; De Luca Picione & Valsiner, 2017).

In adolescence, several studies have investigated the narrative development (Habermas & de Silveira, 2008;
McAdams, 1993; McLean & Breen, 2009; McLean & Mansfield, 2012), considering it as an important attempt
for young people to understand oneself and an opportunity to articulate their own feelings and thoughts about
the self, the Others and the events. In particular, researches on narratives from adolescents who self-harm,
highlighted the presence of a magical thinking in their language to elaborate the emotions (Gregory & Mustata,
2012), and family difficulties and traumas as sources of underlying distress in young women (Abrams &
Gordon, 2003).

Nowadays, the self-harm among young people is narrated commonly through virtual communities (Lewis &
Seko, 2016), where the malaise is shared throughout narratives and images of injured bodies, projecting emo-
tions into the network, and using the same virtual space as emotional regulator (Gargiulo & Margherita, 2019;

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Margherita & Gargiulo, 2018). The meanings emerging from these virtual cultural contexts propose the repre-
sentation of the Self-cutter in oscillation between the normalization and the pathology (Gradin Franzén &
Gottzén, 2011). Therefore, several clinical interventions are taking place within the virtual contexts in order to
intercept the specific needs of young people with self-harm.

In this sense, it could be useful to explore also the meanings about self-harm emerging from school context,
which constitutes a specific field of development of the preventive and clinical interventions. Considering the
school as a cultural context (Ligorio & Pontecorvo, 2010; Margherita, 2007), in which its actors can build mean-
ings and develop practices for the elaboration of experiences, and considering that the self-harm is a contem-
porary theme of clinical relevance in schools, the work aimed to explore the meanings about self-harming be-
haviours emerging from the educational institutions, in order to identify possible trajectories of intervention. To
do this, it stars from the narratives produced by adolescents in high schools, enabling the emerging of contextu-
al meanings from the intersection between the individuals and the environments.

Method

From a perspective of cultural and semiotic psychology (De Luca Picione & Valsiner, 2017; Salvatore & Freda,
2011; Valsiner & Rosa, 2007), in which subjective experience is considered as a continuous process of forma-
tion through the mediation of semiotic devices (meaning, linguistic and aesthetic canons, ways of acting and so
on), a narrative construction that allows to access to culturally shared meanings (Bruner, 1990), and the narra-
tion is considered as a device capable of activating possible fields of knowledge and transformation, we have
chosen a qualitative approach aimed to explore the meanings using the narrative tool. The exploratory qualita-
tive approach allows to start from data, and, through a bottom up method, it provides to identify the main
themes.

Participants

Within a larger research project on self-harm, which involved 589 students from two public high schools in Na-
ples, 97 narratives written by adolescents, who, through a series of funnel questions, had declared that they
had implemented self-harming behaviours at least once in life (72 females and 25 males, average age 14) were
collected.

Tools

A narrative task was arranged to invite to narrate an episode of self-harm (“Tell a story in which the protagonist
intentionally wounds his body. The history can be real or completely invented.” / “Racconta una storia in cui il
protagonista ferisce intenzionalmente il suo corpo. La storia può essere reale o inventata.”). The participants
were asked to indicate whether the protagonist was an imaginary or real character, indicating in this case
whether the narration concerned themselves or others.

Procedure

After contacting twelve higher institutes in Naples, in the two which decided to collaborate, the research passed
to the scrutiny of the Ethical Commissions. The research design was also approved by the Ethics Committee of

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the Federico II University of Naples. The meetings with the classes for the research were followed by a moment
of group discussion with the students. All participants signed the informed consent form for the research. In ad-
dition, research return days open to parents and teachers have been set.

Data Analysis

Within an explorative and qualitative methodology of research, we used a thematic analysis of narrative texts.
To analyse the narratives, we used T-Lab (Lancia, 2004), a qualitative-quantitative software for texts automatic
analysis. We choose to use T-Lab because, based on a comparison of different lexical profiles, it identifies di-
mensions of meanings, shared themes or issues present in the text under analysis, through the study of vo-
cabulary (Bolasco, 1999). The software analyses the texts as a single set of data (Denzin & Lincoln, 1994),
identifying the lexical choices and carrying out on them co-occurrence and comparative analysis. Each lexical
choice, the word, has a meaning in the ‘relationship’ with the other words, therefore, within a discursive dynam-
ic it is observed how much that word presents itself recursively in the relationship with the others (co-occur-
rence). In this way, the frequency of lexical choices informs us of the semiotic process of meaning construction,
allowing to understand how a person constructs meanings of his/her experience.

The narratives as documents were codified following the variables considered, and all the documents were
merged into a single body of text. The variables considered were: sex of participant (female; male); protagonist
of the narrative (myself; real other; imaginary protagonist). The documents analysed are equal in size of textual
corpus for the balancing of statistical weight. We carried out a preliminary treatment of the text (Table 1).

Table 1

Preliminary Organization of the Text

Type of treatment Explication

Lemmatization The forms of the verbs are brought back to their present infinitive forms, the nouns and adjectives to
their singular masculine form, articulated prepositions to their article-less form.

Disambiguos It is an operation by which ambiguous semantic cases are solved. In particular those cases which deal
with homographs whose graphic form is the same but with a different meaning.

Lexicalization To turn the unit into a string phrases consisting of two or three words that refer to a unitary meaning.

Cleaning the vocabulary Words from empty or insignificant, such as the abbreviations techniques, proper names. articles,
conjunctions are deleted.

We performed the analysis of the elementary context unit (e.c.u., like sentences or short texts characterized by
the same patterns of keywords), carrying out some thematic clusters which were projected, as active variables,
on the factorial plane through an analysis of multiple correspondences.

The analysis of the elementary context unit is based on a statistical study of the co-occurrence of words in the
same e.c.u. The final product synthesizes the shared concerns in few significant thematic clusters as a contex-
tual field of meanings (Reinert, 1995) that allow us to build up ‘a thread’ in the discourse. Lexical units (words or
lemmas) are the result of a selection process aimed at creating a list of “key words”. Each cluster consists of a
set of e.c.u. and is described through a set of keywords that, ranked according to the decreasing value of χ2,
indicates that the typicality of each of them within the cluster is associated for semantic value. This allows to

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reflect on the meaning of individual words by reference to a number of e.c.u. analysing it in the context in which
they are used. The meaning of a word is known only through its relations with the contexts, that is, through its
distribution within portion of text (Greimas, 1983). Furthermore, according to the studies of Rommetveit (1998),
Linell (2009), and Valsiner (2001), the language use and the semiotic systems can only be understood in their
inter-relationship between culture, context and history; thus, the words and the clusters emerged have mean-
ings only considering a network between individuals and environments.

Finally, the projection of clusters on the factorial plane allows to observe relationships (oppositions and neigh-
bourhoods) between the issues emerged by interpreting the axes that bind them together.

Results and Discussion

We proceeded with the analysis of the clusters, according to their location on the factorial map (Figure 1) start-
ing from the cluster that is statistically more significant (threshold value p = .05). For each cluster, to which an
interpretative label has been assigned, the key words that mainly characterize it, based on the value of χ2, will
be presented. Four thematic clusters emerged (Table 2).

Table 2

Description of Cluster

Percentage of cluster based on number of e.c.u. Lemma that mainly characterize the cluster based on the value of χ2

Cluster 1 (composed by 97 e.c.u. on a total of 280 equal to 34.64%)
feeling the emotions: the pain embodied in the female

bodies

she (27.377), friends (22.302), meaning (16.576), people (10.082), hate (9.237), became (8.793),

Fabiana (8.667), Marta (8.439), reply (8.439), know (7.948), injury (7.347), alone (6.771), hade

(6,65), suicide (6.75), wrong (6.75), body (6.663), approach (6.345), continue (5.582), try (5.582),

sense (5.464), bear (5.464), show (4.892), pain (4.785), seeing (4.654), feeling (4.222), help

(3.918), provoke (3.918), sign (3.918).

Cluster 2 (composed by 83 e.c.u. on a total of 280, equal to 29.64%)
the spaces of destructiveness at the look of the other cry (23.771), come back (21.652), enter (18.84), professor (17.792), room (12.702), red (12.702),

home (12.177), ended (10.158), quiet (10.158), white (10.158), look (8.984), happy (8.751), arrive

(8.681), wound (8.632), door (8.609), call (8.609), mother (7.533), blood (7.476), love (6.606),

punish (6.6.06), wish (6.606), immediately (6.558), wrist (5.776), leg (4.368), bathroom (4.207).

Cluster 3 (composed by 51 e.c.u. on a total of 280, equal to 18.21%)
couples, families, groups: the relationships which contain together (43.307), Alfredo (35.7649), month (34.026), tired (22.334), friendship (21.299), life

(20.315), cousin (18.818), tell (16.985), take (16.258), class (14.831), family (14.166), strong

(12.891), school (12.299), change (11.649), fear (11.649), round (10.779), useless (8.602),

perfect (8.602), fun (8.602), cut (8.602), day (7.069), engage (5.817).

Cluster 4 (composed by 49 e.c.u. on a total of 280, equal to 17.5%)
self-harm as a test of strength of the masculine Drake (36.343), Michael (25.945), John (20.75), fire (19.99), big (18.328), high (15.79), physical

(15.337), music (15.041), pleasure (12.322), unique (12.014), window (10.219), immense

(10.219), protagonist (10.219), choose (10.219), own (7.091), last (7.091), listen (7.091), play

(5.317). Sex Male (10.257).
Note. e.c.u = elementary context unit.

On the lower left quadrant of the factorial map we find cluster 1, named ‘feeling the emotions: the pain embod-
ied in the female bodies’. This cultural context brings the issue of feminine into an emergency in the elaboration

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of the experience of self-harm. In fact, it is clear that the cluster incorporates many lemmas declined to the fem-
inine (she, friends, alone, and the presence of female names of a person like Fabiana and Marta). The cluster
aggregates also lemmas that lead back to a sensory level of self-harm practice (meaning, body, seeing, feeling,
signs), telling us about the psychic suffering through a wounded female body (wound). References to the emo-
tions of hatred, to the experiences of pain and loneliness, to suicide, as well as to the guilt (wrong) seem to
shape female self-harm as particularly connected to a depressed mood, close to the drive of self-destruction, of
death.

A lonely and frustrated child mocked by everyone for the sole reason that she was not as beautiful as
the others, she felt inferior. Every boy who passed only looked at her friends and never at her. Nobody
was interested in knowing her and she felt so alone and wrong that she got to physically hurt herself
(Female, real story, protagonist other than herself).

He decided to try to see if she could feel better too. He initially tried only with insignificant scratches.
When he did he felt better, because he could vent all his anger. She vented on herself because she did
not want to hurt the others (Female, real story, protagonist herself).

Thus, the narratives that are aggregated in this cluster seem to offer us a representation of female self-harm as
a marker of anguish, which passes through experiences of loneliness, suicidal ideas, feelings of inferiority and
experiences of devaluation for one’s body. The emphasis is on the use of a sensorial-perceptive nature repre-
sentation that starts from the body, from the colours, from the sensations.

On the upper right quadrant there is cluster 2, named ‘the spaces of destructiveness at the look of the other’.
They join lemmas that refer to the spaces in which young usually self-harm, like the room or the bathroom of
the house or school. At the same time, it seems that these places can be used in their psychic function to limit,
as ‘borderline’ spaces where they can bring a request for help that moves from the body to the door. However,
these boundaries, as real as psychic, expose to the other’s gaze, telling a possible unconscious need to be
discovered by the mother, the professor (even the entries ‘enter’ and ‘get’ tell of someone who enters and dis-
covers those injured). Moreover, in adolescence, interstitial spaces can be sought to bring many conflicting and
secret contents, sometimes in an ambivalent form.

In addition, the cluster brings out different references to the size of the urgency (immediately), as well as to the
injured parts of the body such as the wrist or the leg, or to colours ranging from clean white to red blood, all
elements that connote the phenomenology of the self-harming act.

Once inside, he took a cutter out of his pocket and made cuts on his wrist. He began to lose a lot of
blood to the point that he fainted, a boy entered the bathroom and accidentally saw blood flowing out
the door. He immediately called the janitors who brought the ambulance. The boy who had cut himself
did not make it (Male, invented story, protagonist of fantasy).

... mother where he kept the razor blades, the boy took it, rolled his sleeves up and 1 2 3 4 5 cuts that
made so much blood come out that the sink turned from white to all red the boy felt bad he stayed
there crying for one hour thinking of that girl who one day before leaving called him best friend (Male,
real story, protagonist other than himself).

The second theme, therefore, represents the phenomenology of the self-harm symptom with reference to the
concrete dimensions of the act (the wounding modalities, the injured parts) and the urgency of the symptom.

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The psychological operation that the adolescent is called to do in the invitation to narrate, is specular to that of
the clinician, that is to move from the real to the symbolic, to go beyond the urgency of the concrete and be-
yond the factual reality, to access the psychic reality, to fantasy on facts. Through the narration we begin to talk,
to name emotions, to attribute meaning to events, in a process of change in the relationship with the object,
with the present and the past. Moreover, the spaces in which the symptom is brought are the liminal ones be-
tween the self and the other, psychic places in which to be watched, thresholds with psychic relational func-
tions. Recalling Green (1991) and his theory of limit cases, we share that those who are self-harmers, beyond
being and acting on the limit / edge, embody the elusive limit, they are the limit themselves.

Between the two quadrants at the top of the factorial map we find cluster 3, named ‘couples, families, groups:
the relationships which contain’. This cultural context brings together lemmas that refer to sentimental relation-
ships (together, engagement), family (cousin), as well as social (friendship, class, school) that seem to act as
good containers capable of accommodating disturbing (fearful) and non-disturbing (fun) contents; there is a
search for a place where to store emotions, and it turns out that, besides the body, there is the other, the family
and the peer group. At the same time, it is the cluster of relationships put to the test through provocative acts
aiming at testing if the container can resist attacks (Ruggiero, 2007), as well as relational events that may pres-
age self-destructiveness scenarios.

It is a cluster where words, that evoke the possibility of narrating experience (telling), also through references to
temporality (month, days), are aggregated.

Once there was nothing. There’s everything now, now there’s Alfredo, he’s not a prince, he’s all, he’s a
friend, a body, he’s mine, he’s that person, even if you stab him, he’s not going, he’s heart, he’s body,
life (Female, real history, protagonist herself).

A girl who had a life that was thought to be perfect... But then her cousin got sick ... The girl with her
cousin did everything, they attended the same school and even the same class, they slept together and
they had a loving family very tied up. In short, everything was perfect (Female, real story, protagonist
herself).

Offering the link to the relationship seems to be an important relapse, a possible answer, since, as Ladame
(1983) points out, in cases of self-harm, we observe the presence of a primitive, archaic narcissism, which acts
in an anti-relational direction, attacking the link. The urgency of the facts overwhelms the story, as well as the
urgency of the symptom overwhelms the other by causing it to counter-acted and cancelling the space of sus-
pension and think-ability. In this sense, then, the narrative of the standing bond seems to be an invitation to
stay, to resist attacks, to tolerate frustration. Besides, also in the literature it has been shown how, on the clini-
cal side, the relationship with such patients is difficult to establish and to maintain, often subject to interruptions
and acts; where an insufficient basic narcissistic structure accentuates the dependence on the object, it is often
the recognition of this dependence that triggers the use of violent action, in an extreme attempt to stem a threat
of invasion and colonization by the object. In this sense, it is important to underline that intervention programs
have been developed in schools that are sensitive to managing the relationship difficulties with such adoles-
cents.

Finally, in the lower left quadrant cluster 4 is placed, called ‘self-harm as a test of strength of the masculine’.
The cluster aggregates lemmas that refer to a grandiose dimension of oneself (big, tall, physical) and of what
the protagonist is facing (fire, immense). This cultural unification represents male self-harming as physical re-

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sistance, proof of strength, far from how the feminine one is told. We can hypothesize the presence of a pro-
found difficulty in representing himself as self-harmer in depressed and sad tones, preferring to narrate the ad-
ventures of a protagonist who wounds himself in war or in a duel, in a polarized dynamic on the maniacal side
that denies a part of the self.

This dimension is approached through the use of imagination, the area of ‘as if’; in fact, the cluster is full of
references to people far from reality, as the proper names allow us to understand (Drake, Michael, John), which
instead seem to refer to heroes of novels, movies or video games.

Drake raised his sword to the sky, while the fire deteriorated the little body that remained attached to
him. He pointed the blade at himself and suddenly pierced the side of Drake (Male, invented story).

She started from the wrist, then the whole arm, then the calf, the thigh and the part she liked the most:
the belly. How much she loved to see that hated belly that was being hurt. When she stopped she liked
to touch the wounds and feel the blood flowing, she went to the bathroom and rinsed (Female, real
story, protagonist herself).

Finally, the representation of male self-harm seems completely overwhelmed by the practice of self-harm as a
test of resistance to pain, where it seems difficult to describe oneself as suffering and where one prefers to use
imaginary protagonists, vigorous heroes with whom it is reassuring to identify oneself. If self-harm in female
representation is a marker of distress, the masculine one is a marker of physical endurance.

Interpretation Using Factorial Axes

On the I factor, the horizontal one, we find the axis named ‘through gender differences’. This factor is organized
along a continuum that opposes, as shown in the figure, on the one hand the self-harm to the feminine, using
stories of real characters (positioning of the ‘other real’ variable), on the other hand, the cluster of male self-
harm with its specific meanings and recourse to an invented story with a fictional character. In psychic terms,
we interpret his polarization of genders on the physical graphic plane in the construction of a discourse on self-
harming behaviours in scholastic contexts that is articulated in a semiotic trajectory on gender issues, a sense
vector that gives us back the idea that a speech about self-harm as it emerges in these cultural contexts is
something incarnate, of peculiar respect to the bodies and to their biological and cultural differences.

On the second factor, we find the vertical axis called ‘emotional experience: from concrete to symbolic’, which
sees the opposition between a polarization based on the sensorial and physical dimensions of the emotions
that are acted in self-harming conducts and in relational attacks, and on the other, an organization based on the
representable experience of self-harm that, through the contexts in which it is acted, can access the plan of the
imaginary and the symbolic. Therefore, on the one hand we find clusters 1 and 3 that are opposed to clusters 2
and 4 accompanied by the variable ‘imaginary protagonist’. On the psychic level, if from a pole there is the rec-
ognition of the concrete dimensions that pass through the body, on the other there is the possibility of access to
a process of affective symbolization, which falls within spaces that become cultural contexts. It seems to prefig-
ure a semiotic trajectory that pertains to the difficult process of emotional regulation: raw sensory elements, ur-
gent and intense emotions such as anger and boredom need to be recognized, felt, tolerated, reclaimed, in a
process that moves towards imagination and attribution of meaning.

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On the III factor, named ‘towards change: from the individual to the relationship’, we find the clusters 1 and 4,
based on the symptomatic declinations of the behaviour of self-harm, which are opposed to clusters 2 and 3,
based on relational dimensions. This three-dimensional axis, both on the factorial and psychic level, grasping
the depth of graphic space and internal space, allows the theme of self-harm to be harmonized, finding in the
relationships the point of arrival for the various aspects involved in this process of signification. A third semiotic
trajectory, therefore, appears as a relational one: it is in the link with the object that one can access the possibil-
ity of bringing a request for help in context. In conclusion, this vector of meaning opens up to possible interven-
tions that investigate the area of relationships, which can sometimes prefigure self-harm scenarios.

Figure 1. Factorial map of clusters.

Conclusion

The present work aimed to explore the meanings about self-harm emerging within the school context, starting
from the narratives shared by students with experiences of self-harm. Although some issues emerged from the
analysis refer to the idea that self-harm is a behaviour strongly sensitive to gender differences, the study has
highlighted that the area of relationships is a dimension that unites adolescents with such behaviour, therefore
both clinical and educational interventions are possible. Moreover, considering that self-harming behaviour acts

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as an emotional regulator, according to the literature (Gratz, 2007; Klonsky, 2007), being aware of using self-
harm as a regulator of emotions is accompanied by the possibility of being able to express a request for help.
So the centrality of the difficulties in regulating emotions in self-harm in adolescence highlights the need to work
in order to develop programs that allow the recognition of emotions, so that adolescents can achieve effective
regulation of the same, even in previous school years as a possible preventive measure.

In general, the work made it possible to observe that the phenomenon of self-harming circulates in school con-
texts and belongs to both the imaginary and the real level of adolescents, who respond positively when invited
to tell it, as evidence of a desire to narrate as well to be seen and helped. Thus, in line with the literature on the
subject (Bareiss, 2014; Hill & Dallos, 2012), narration is a functional tool for developing meaning and meaning-
making processes in adolescents with conduct of self-harm; where the concrete plan of the act obscures the
possibility of think disturbing emotions and memories, the narration of self-harm allows to access to a first sym-
bolization and transformation of the emotion towards the representation of experience.

Through this study, therefore, we emphasize the importance of school as a valuable context of research and
intervention to intercept young malaise. The quali-quantitative work allows reflections on specific needs, on
possible areas of clinical intervention, offering guidelines for developing intervention protocols in school set-
tings. In fact, prevention strategies can be developed for all adolescents as well as strategies for groups of ado-
lescents at risk, or plans that include the training of teachers and parents, as suggested also in literature
(Shapiro, 2008). Specifically, assuming the symptomatology of self-harm as strongly non-verbal and pre-verbal,
it will be useful to develop safe environments for young adults with self-harming behaviours moderated by a
psychologist, where is possible the welcoming, the naming of emotions, the encouraging of relationships, as
well as an interpretation of behaviours.

Therefore, the trajectories of the discourse produced in the investigated cultural context can act as guidelines
for possible trajectories of intervention within the same contexts. Thus, the issues that concern gender differen-
ces, the area of emotional regulation, the difficulty in managing relationships can represent possible areas in
which to draw up intervention plans and guidelines for work with both students and teachers in schools.

Among the limitations of the study we can include an unbalanced sampling by gender, even if the data analysis
software allows to check this variability and to proceed to a qualitative study; the future aim is to extend the
research sample.

Funding
The author has no funding to report.

Competing Interests
The author has declared that no competing interests exist.

Acknowledgments
The author has no support to report.

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Abou t th e A utho r

Anna Gargiulo, Ph.D. in Gender Studies, Post-doctoral Research Fellow at Department of Humanistic Studies, University
of Naples Federico II, Italy. Visiting Researcher at Centre of Cultural Psychology of Aalborg University Denmark. Visiting
Ph.D. Student at Medical University of Vienna. Psychology and Psychotherapist. Adopting quali-quantitative methods, she
studies the narrative elaboration of traumatic experiences, deepening the self-harming behaviors among adolescents and
young adults, also within virtual communities. Please direct correspondence to anna.gargiulo2@unina.it.

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	Narratives of Self-Harm at School
	(Introduction)
	The Behaviours of Self-Harm at School
	The Elaborative Function of Narrative

	Method
	Participants
	Tools
	Procedure
	Data Analysis

	Results and Discussion
	Interpretation Using Factorial Axes

	Conclusion
	(Additional Information)
	Funding
	Competing Interests
	Acknowledgments

	References
	About the Author