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Last update:
22 November 2009

© Copyright 2003–2009
John Benjamins.
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Narrative and Identity

Studies in Autobiography, Self and Culture

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Edited by Jens Brockmeier and Donal Carbaugh
University of Toronto & Freie Universität Berlin / University of Massachusetts at Amherst

2001. vi, 307 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 2641 9 / EUR 105.00
978 1 58811 056 5 / USD 158.00
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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9805 8 / EUR 105.00 / USD 158.00
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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. With contributions from some of the leading scholars in the field, 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.


Table of contents

Introduction
Jens Brockmeier and Donal Carbaugh
1–22
Part I: Narrative and Self Construction: Theoretical Perspectives
23
Self-making and world-making
Jerome S. Bruner
25–37
Narrative: Problems and promises of an alternative paradigm
Jens Brockmeier and Rom Harré
39–58
Metaphysics and narrative: Singularities and multiplicities of self
Rom Harré
59–73
Narrative integrity: Autobiographical identity and the meaning of the “good life”
Mark Freeman and Jens Brockmeier
75–99
Part II: Worlds of Identity: Life Stories in Cultural Context
101
“The people will come to you”: Blackfeet narrative as a resource for contemporary living
Donal Carbaugh
103–127
Narratives of national identity as group narratives: Patterns of interpretive cognition
Carol Fleisher Feldman
129–144
“You’re marked”: Breast cancer, tattoo, and the narrative performance of identity
Kristin M. Langellier
145–184
Part III: Between Past and Present: Autobiographical Memory and Narrative Identity
185
Richard Wagner’s creative vision at La Spezia: or The retrospective interpretation of experience in autobiographical memory as a function of an emerging identity
Jerome R. Sehulster
187–217
Identity and narrative in Piaget’s autobiographies
Jacques Vonèche
219–245
From the end to the beginning: Retrospective teleology in autobiography
Jens Brockmeier
247–280
: Concluding commentary
281
From substance to story: Narrative, identity, and the reconstruction of the self
Mark Freeman
283–298
List of contributors
299
Credits and acknowledgements
301
Index
303–307


The mode of thought which is narrative and the modern preoccupation with identity meet here in this important book. This will be a central text for anyone with concern for either of these fields, and essential for those whose interests span both of them. Brockmeier and Carbaugh have assembled an impressive array of authors who have laid the foundations of inquiry about how people construct narratives of their lives.

This volume, despite the independence of its various contributions, nonetheless serves the important purpose of exploring how we construct what we call our lives, and how we create ourselves in the process. All these various contributions point to a single focus, that is, the process of autobiographical identity construction. This volume would help to open new ways to narrative studies, shedding new light on human conception of human lives and how they might be approached and be understood.
Bingyun Li, Fujian Teachers University, Fuzhou, Fujian, China in Linguist List Vol-12-2686. Sat Oct 27 2001

Narrative and Identity: Studies in Autobiography, Self, and Culture promises to be a rich and useful volume. It is rich in terms of the diversity and quality of authors it brings together for the development and illustration of a common theme. It is rich as well in terms of the variety of ways it shows how narratives function in the lives of people, particularly in the ways that narratives function in the ways individuals constitute their own identities and link themselves in various ways to cultures. It will be a useful book because of this richness and quality but also because it addresses a timely topic that is of interest to scholars, students, and general readers.
Gerry Philipsen, Chair and Professor in the Department of Communication, University of Washington.

This book, edited skillfully by Jens Brockmeier and Donal Carbaugh, explores how narrative is central to how we make sense of ourselves — culturally as well as individually — and how narratives can be used as methodological tools in the exploration of selves and others, including groups and whole cultures. It is indeed an ideal volume for the start of our new series Studies in Narrative.
Michael Bamberg , Professor at Frances L. Hiatt School of Psychology, Clark University, and Editor of Narrative Inquiry.

A richly synthetic exploration of narrative as the pre-eminent instrument of self-fashioning, illuminating in transdisciplinary perspective the poetics of identity as culturally and intersubjectively constituted.
Richard Bauman, Distinguished Professor of Communication, Culture, and Folklore, Indiana University

[...] elegantly written, full of important information and conclusions, edited so to provide a wide-ranging insight into an original and provoking field of human sciences.
Aleksandr Dimitrijevic in Metapsychology Feb. 2002

I believe that this is a wide-ranging and interdisciplinary, highly inspiring and valuable volume. Especially the first part, with its theoretical exploration of concepts of self and narrative from the threefold perspective of social science, psychology and literature, will be important for those working in the field of literary autobiography or the study of 'narrative' in a wider sense. Moreover, what stands out are the insightful connections the contributors make between self-narration in 'high art' or 'high theory' and the everyday stories which human beings use to understand and communicate their own lives to others.
Antje Lindenmeyer, University of Warwick in European Journal of English Studies Vol.8:1, 2004

Narrative and Identity is a treasure trove for anyone studying the human experience in various disciplines.
Michelle Hammer in University of Toronto Quarterly - Volume 72 Number 1, Winter 2002/3.