Lines of narrative : psychosocial perspectives
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Lines of narrative : psychosocial perspectives
Routledge, 2000
- alk. paper
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This volume brilliantly advances our understanding of the use of narrative in the social sciences. It brings together contemporary work on narrative theory and methods and presents a fascinating range of case-studies, from Princess Diana's Panorama interview to the memoirs of the wives of US nuclear scientists.
Table of Contents
- Introduction, Molly Andrews, Shelley Day Sclater, Michael Rustin, Corinne Squire, Amal Treacher
- Part 1 Narrative and culture
- intro_1 Introduction, Corinne Squire
- Chapter 1 Narrative, civil society and public culture, Ronald N. Jacobs
- Chapter 2 Resurrective practice and narrative, Clive Scale
- Chapter 3 Wedding bells and baby carriages, Suzanna Danuta Walters
- Chapter 4 Narratives as bad faith, Ian Craib
- Part 2 Narrative and life history
- intro_2 Introduction, Molly Andrews
- Chapter 5 When the story's over, Mark Freeman
- Chapter 6 A cautious ethnography of socialism, Zdenek Konopasek, Molly Andrews
- Chapter 7 'Papa's bomb', Carol Wolkowitz
- Chapter 8 Betrayals, trauma and self-redemption?, Tom Wengraf
- Part 3 Narrative and discourse
- intro_3 Introduction, Shelley Day Sclater
- Chapter 9 Narrative, discourse and the unconscious, Wendy Hollway, Tony Jefferson
- Chapter 10 Fictional(ising) identity?, Helen Malson
- Chapter 11 'Let them rot', Marion V. Smith
- Chapter 12 Narrative and the discursive (re)construction of events, Jackie Abell, Elizabeth H. Stokoe, Michael Billig
- Chapter 13 Conclusion, Phil Bradbury, Shelley Day Sclater
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