Read more
Klappentext We define our conscious experience by constructing narratives about ourselves and the people with whom we interact. Narrative pervades our lives--conscious experience is not merely linked to the number and variety of personal stories we construct with each other within a cultural frame, but issubsumed by them. The claim, however, that narrative constructions are essential to conscious experience is not useful or informative unless we can also begin to provide a distinct, organized, and empirically consistent explanation for narrative in relation to consciousness. Understanding the roleof narrative in determining individual and collective consciousness has been elusive from within traditional academic frameworks. This volume argues that addressing so broad and complex a problem requires an examination from outside our insular disciplinary framework. Such an open examination wouldbe informed by the inquiries and approaches of multiple disciplines. Recognition of the different approaches to examining personal stories will allow for the coordination of how narrative seems (its phenomenology), with what mental labor it does (its psychology), and how it is realized (itsneurobiology). Only by overcoming the boundaries erected by multiple theoretical and discursive traditions can we begin to comprehend the nature and function of narrative in consciousness. Narrative and Consciousness brings together essays by exceptional scholars and scientists in the disciplines of literary theory, psychology, and neuroscience to examine how stories are constructed, how stories structure lived experience, and how stories are rooted in material reality (the humanbody). The specifictopics addressed include narrative in the development of conscious awareness; autobiographical narrative, fiction and the construction of self; trauma and narrative disruptions; narrative, memory and identity; and the physiological and neural substrate of narrative. It is the Zusammenfassung The evocation of narrative as a way to understand the content of consciousness, including memory, autobiography, self, and imagination, has sparked truly interdisciplinary work among psychologists, philosophers, and literary critics. Research presented in this volume should appeal to researchers enmeshed in these problems. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1: Introduction Part I: Role of narrative in the development of conscious awareness 2: Narrative and the emergence of a consciousness of self 3: The development of self Part II: Narrative and the autobiographical memory 4: The role of narrative in recollection: A view from cognitive and neuropsychology 5: Material selves: Bodies, memory and autobiographical narrating Part III: Autobiographical narrative, fiction and the construction of self 6: Rethinking the fictive, reclaiming the real: Autobiography, narrative time and the burden of truth 7: Dual-focalization, retrospective fictional autobiography, and the ethics of Lolita Part IV: Narrative disruptions in the construction of self 8: The pursuit of death in holocaust narrative 9: Community and coherence: narrative contributions to the psychology of conflict and loss Part V: Neural substrate of narrative and consciousness realization (or The naturalist model) 10: Empirical Evidence for a Narrative Concept of Self 11: Sexual Identities and Narratives of Self ...