ABSTRACT

Social scientists increasingly invoke "narrative" in their theory and research. This book explores the wide range of work in sociology, psychology and cultural studies in which narrative approaches have been used to study meaning, subjectivity, politics, and power in concrete contexts.The Uses of Narrative presents a range of case studies, including: Princess Diana's Panorama interview, media coverage of the 1992 Los Angeles riots, memoirs of the wives of scientists who made the first atomic bomb, popular images of gay marriage, and the effect of the "Velvet Revolution" on writing autobiography.The book brings together contributions from European, Australian, and North American researchers, indicating the diversity and potential of narrative approaches. The editors adopt a distinctive and unique psychosocial approach to narrative, and set the individual chapters in the context of three broad themes: culture, life histories, and discourse. The Uses of Narrative complicates, challenges and stimulates--it will be of vital interest to sociologists, psychologists, social theorists, students of cultural studies, and others who are interested in the relationships between meaning, self and society.

part I|64 pages

Narrative and culture

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|12 pages

Resurrective practice and narrative

chapter 3|16 pages

Wedding bells and baby carriages

Heterosexuals imagine gay families, gay families imagine themselves

chapter 4|11 pages

Narratives as bad faith

part II|54 pages

Narrative and life history

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter 5|11 pages

When the story’s over

Narrative foreclosure and the possibility of self-renewal

chapter 6|12 pages

A cautious ethnography of socialism

Autobiographical narrative in the Czech Republic

chapter 7|13 pages

‘Papa’s bomb’

The local and the global in women’s Manhattan Project personal narratives

chapter 8|12 pages

Betrayals, trauma and self-redemption?

The meanings of ‘the closing of the mines’ in two ex-miners’ narratives

part III|64 pages

Narrative and discourse

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

chapter 9|14 pages

Narrative, discourse and the unconscious

The case of Tommy

chapter 10|14 pages

Fictional(isitig) identity?

Ontological assumptions and methodological productions of (‘anorexic’) subjectivities

chapter 11|16 pages

‘Let them rot’

Four boys talk about punishment