Publications
Publication details [#19486]
Brockmeier, Jens and Donal Carbaugh, eds. 2001. Narrative and Identity: Studies in Autobiography, Self and Culture. (Studies in Narrative 1). John Benjamins. vi + 307 pp.
Publication type
Book – edited volume
Publication language
English
Keywords
ISBN
90 272 2641 5
Annotation
How does narrative give shape and meaning to human life? And what special role do narratives play in identifying one as a person in the world? This book explores these questions from the vantage points of various human and cultural sciences, with special attention to the importance of narrative as expression of embodied experience, mode of communication, and form for understanding the world and ultimately ourselves. Presenting a variety of perspectives - from narrative psychology and literary criticism, to discourse, communication and cultural theory - these studies examine the intricacies of narrative identity construction. The book highlights the cultural field in which narratives shape forms of life. Using verbal and pictorial, linguistic and performative, oral and written, natural and literary autobiographical texts, the studies demonstrate how the construction of selves, memories, and life-worlds are interwoven in one narrative fabric.
Articles in this volume
Freeman, Mark and Jens Brockmeier. Narrative integrity: Autobiographical identity and the meaning of the “good life”. 75–99
Carbaugh, Donal. “The people will come to you”: Blackfeet narrative as a resource for contemporary living. 103–127
Feldman, Carol Fleisher. Narratives of national identity as group narratives: Patterns of interpretive cognition. 129–144
Langellier, Kristin M. “You’re marked”: Breast cancer, tattoo, and the narrative performance of identity. 145–184