Affiliation:
1. Department of TESL and Applied Linguistics, University of California, Los Angeles, 3300 Rolfe Hall, Los Angeles, California 90095-1531;
Abstract
▪ Abstract Across cultures, narrative emerges early in communicative development and is a fundamental means of making sense of experience. Narrative and self are inseparable in that narrative is simultaneously born out of experience and gives shape to experience. Narrative activity provides tellers with an opportunity to impose order on otherwise disconnected events, and to create continuity between past, present, and imagined worlds. Narrative also interfaces self and society, constituting a crucial resource for socializing emotions, attitudes, and identities, developing interpersonal relationships, and constituting membership in a community. Through various genres and modes; through discourse, grammar, lexicon, and prosody; and through the dynamics of collaborative authorship, narratives bring multiple, partial selves to life.
Subject
Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Anthropology,Cultural Studies
Cited by
740 articles.
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