Narrative as construction and discursive resource

Author
Abstract
Discursive psychologists have analysed identity work in talk, including the ways in which understandings which prevail in a wider social context are taken up or resisted as speakers position themselves and are positioned by others. In these terms, a narrative is generally understood in two ways. The first is as an established understanding of sequence or consequence, such as a potential life trajectory, which becomes a discursive resource for speakers to draw on. The second is of a narrative as a situated construction, such as the biography produced by a speaker within a particular interaction. In this article, I propose an expanded analytic focus which considers how the versions of a biographical narrative produced in previous tellings become resources for future talk, thus setting constraints on a reflexive speaker s work to construct a coherent identity across separate interactions and contexts.
Notes
From the library of John McKendy
Year of Publication
2006
Journal
Narrative Inquiry
Volume
16
Issue
1
Pagination
94-102
ISBN Number
1387-6740
Taylor, S. 2006. “Narrative As Construction And Discursive Resource”. Narrative Inquiry 16 (1): 94-102.
Journal Article