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Identity Research, Narrative Approaches, and ‘Small Stories’ OVERVIEW: New questions in Psychology How discourse + narrative have started to “move in”

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Presentation on theme: "Identity Research, Narrative Approaches, and ‘Small Stories’ OVERVIEW: New questions in Psychology How discourse + narrative have started to “move in”"— Presentation transcript:

1 Identity Research, Narrative Approaches, and ‘Small Stories’ OVERVIEW: New questions in Psychology How discourse + narrative have started to “move in” The turn to discourse The turn to narrative Psychology - Discourse - Narrative Dexus4, Aalborg 2006 Michael Bamberg

2 What’s rocking ‘Psychology’? three interesting dilemmas (aporias/illusions?) –the identity dilemma How can we construct ourselves as same in the face of constant change? –the uniqueness dilemma How can we construct ourselves as (radically) different (same) from others in the face of commonality/sameness (difference)? –the construction dilemma (“who’s in charge”?) How can we construct (make sense of) ourselves in light of being constantly (or “always-already”) constructed (made sense of)? –world-to-person direction of fit –person-to-world direction of fit Narrative & Discourse as having to ‘say something’

3 the depiction of ambiguity ‘lenses’ and ‘dialectics’ –figure & ground –GROUNDING Activity > –what/who is “behind” taking a particular perspective? - why do we see a vase and why do we see two faces?

4 views of the world + the person “the construction business” ‘the qualitative stance’ viewing the person as actively + agentively involved taking the personal, local, subjective perspective taking the communal, social and historical as “built into” the local, contextual practices viewing identity as constantly (re-)constructed (and open to change) with communicative (discursive) practices as the sites where these constructions take place - where a sense of self and a sense of ‘the other’ emerge -where a sense of constancy + change can co-exist

5 Discourse Two traditions –A more cognitive/conceptual orientation as interested in the discursive devices (formal properties) –as resources or as products? {‘Discourse Processes’} –A more constructionist/process oriented perspective as interested in the production of formal devices and repertoires - how these devices are made use of ((their contextual and emergent properties)) {‘ Discourse Studies’ ; ‘ Discourse & Society’ } Both with different research agenda

6 Discourse - perspective II narrative as a ‘special kind of discourse’ discourse - talk - interaction as taking place in “real” - i.e., mundane, everyday, situated (contextual), local, communal practices that’s where notions (“illusions”?) of selves, continuity, differences (+ sameness + uniqueness) come together (emerge) with ‘talk’ as the central site

7 The centrality of discourse Talk/Discourse: –grammar/syntax; lexicon; pronunciation; intonation (contours) (prosody); segmentation (pauses, silences); gaze; gestures; bodies discourse “über alles” - ‘not everything is discourse’ phenomena analyzed (in concert) in the service of ‘doing talk’ in order to do interactive, relational, conversational, dialogic business --- within which these impressions of sameness, continuity + difference, otherness emerge - as interactional accomplishments A radically empirical program

8 Narrative “the narrative perspective” Choice between two perspectives –A more cognitive/conceptual orientation as interested in lives and experiences of people –as resources or as products? –A more constructionist/process oriented perspective as interested in the production of lives and experiences - and sense of self as a process Both with different research agenda

9 Perspective I the “Big Story” perspective Confronting your self ‘reflectively’: ---F Schuetze - W Fischer & G Rosenthal - T Wengraf & P Chamberlayne ( the biographic interview ) ---Rukmini Bhaya Nair (stories as life’s platform) --Mark Freeman ( hermeneutic textual version ) ---Hubert Hermans ( voices/dialogicality ) ---Dan McAdams + Jerome Singer ( self-forming memories ) ---Katherine Nelson + Robin Fivush ( autobiographic memory )

10 Narrative - perspective I (A+B)( cont.) Stories and a ‘sense of self’ (identity/subjectivity) –A. In stories people come to express (re-present) their experience/life and through that their sense of continuity + change (the unity of character, time + place - formed into a coherent whole) consisting of pre-formed plot lines with individually experienced events woven into them –B. In stories people form/construct their sense of continuity (stories as facilitators to form representations of self as coherent) - a more constructivist view Both pay little attention to the situated, interactive, local dimensions of ‘discourse’ Narrative as a ‘discourse genre’ (=perspective II) stories as accomplishing interactive business

11 Narrative as discursive practices - perspective II stories as interactive (dialogical) accounting language forms and discursive devices used to accomplish interactive accounting –interviews (clinical or biographic): no exception! no direct link from the use of particular language/discourse use to the mind/inner self all interpretation has to go through an analysis of the devices used to accomplish local, interactive business dealing more with the non-interview-elicited conversations

12 Small story identity construction Narrative as social interaction –stories-in-interaction (= “small stories”) as ‘navigating’ through ‘interactive trouble’ –stories are situated actions ðRitualized/habitual performances - sedimented through iterative performances - hailing subjects into being ( potential of resulting in ‘identity’) ðWhere selves ( identities ) come to existence (EMERGE)  position themselves and are positioned

13 Positioning Analysis Three levels of POSITIONING –Characters are positioned vis-à-vis one another Who is doing what to whom? –Speaker and audience are positioning each other Lecturing, advice giving, accounting, etc –Speaker positions ‘a self’ / his/her ‘identity’ Expert identity, hetero-sexual self, masculine identity Positions as interactively accomplished ( in and through the use of discourse )

14 The Davie Hogan Story Using a film clip to teach positioning analysis: –Level one: who are the characters and how are they presented –before and after the story: story negotiation –How can we use level 1 and level 2 analysis as indices for identity claims A methods class

15 What is the story ‘about’? A boy A fat boy who always gets teased A pie-eating contest A huge barforama A revenge Davie’s revenge for always getting teased A kid taking on an adversary environment A kid taking on the adult world Teenage fantasies (in America?) Growing up in the American culture (the 60ties?) Coming of age In order to be able to say something about the identities of these four boys, we start out by determining closer, how they are framed/positioned IN the story

16 Who ARE these for boys? CAN we make assumptions about the participants: –How do they come across by their contributions to the story? –How do they arrange themselves sequentially? –How do they accomplish ‘a sense of who they are’? How do we arrive at OUR interpretations? LET’S HAVE A CLOSER LOOK: working with story negotiation BEFORE and AFTER

17 exercises Britney Spears Shaggy Heidi Story Betty tells her story

18 ‘Shaggy’ It wasn’t me Honey came in and she caught me red-handed it wasn’t me CHORUS: but she caught me on the counter it wasn’t me saw me banging on the sofa it wasn’t me I even had her in the shower it wasn’t me she even caught me on camera it wasn’t me

19 Heidi used to call me her little honey for some STRANGE REASON we used to go to preschool together, right and there was that big mat like it was a big pillow in the little in the reading area and I used to like to get there wicked early cause my Dad used to work for the city, right and I used to hide in that pillow so Heidi couldn't find me, right and she used to run up there and she used to pounce on the ball she said Victor I'M GONNA FIND YOU and then I just sit there going oughhhh

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