Publications

Publication details [#59456]

Burdelski, Matthew, Keiichi Yamazaki and Michie Kawashima. 2014. Storytelling in guided tours: Practices, engagement, and identity at a Japanese American museum. Narrative Inquiry 24 (2) : 328–346.
Publication type
Article in journal
Publication language
English
Place, Publisher
John Benjamins
Journal DOI
10.1075/ni

Annotation

This article examines storytelling (narratives) in interaction at a Japanese American museum. The analysis draws upon audiovisual recordings of tours led by older, male Japanese American docents. It examines ways docents tell stories — primarily of vicarious experience — in educating visitors on Japanese-American history, and ways they use a range of verbal and non-verbal communicative practices that invite visitors’ engagement in the telling as a social and sense-making activity. The article categorizes two types of communicative practices: elicited and non-elicited. Elicited practices include (1) interrogative and polar questions, which are further divided into (a) known and (b) unknown information questions, and (2) other-repetition + list intonation. Non-elicited practices include affective talk and gestures in recounting past events. The article shows ways that visitor engagement varies in relation to elicited and non-elicited practices. Finally, it discusses storytelling as a vehicle for displaying and positioning the self and others in relation to stance and identity, and in working towards the goals of the museum.