Fr. 45.90

How Stories Change Us - A Developmental Science of Stories From Fiction and Real Life

English · Hardback

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Description

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In How Stories Change Us, Elaine Reese integrates the latest scientific research on stories from fiction (books, TV shows and movies, videogames) with stories from real life (our personal experiences, including on social media) across the lifespan. The book offers an authoritative yet accessible overview of the new interdisciplinary science of stories, told by a developmental psychologist and autobiographical memory expert with over thirty years of experience conducting research on stories. Reese synthesizes cutting-edge research for an interdisciplinary audience, offers practical tips for parents, teachers, librarians, and policymakers, and she advocates for a more integrated science of stories to allow us to better choose the stories we consume and tell.

List of contents










  • Preface

  • Chapter 1: The Bright Side of Stories

  • Chapter 2: The Gender Gap in Stories

  • Chapter 3: How Children Grow to Love Stories

  • Chapter 4: Growing Teens Who Use Stories Wisely

  • Chapter 5: The Dangers of Fictional Stories

  • Chapter 6: The Dangers of Real-Life Stories

  • Chapter 7: The Thin Line Between Reality and Fantasy in Stories

  • Chapter 8: The Story Delivery System

  • Epilogue: The Stories in Our Future

  • Acknowledgments

  • Appendix: Recommended Stories

  • Notes

  • Index



About the author

Elaine Reese is Professor of Psychology at the University of Otago. She is an American-New Zealand developmental psychologist who has researched the impact of stories on children's and adolescents' development and well-being for over 30 years. Her focus is on how parents and teachers in diverse cultures support young people's language, literacy, and socioemotional development through the stories they share from books and real-life experiences. Reese received her B.A. in Psychology from Trinity University, her M.A. and Ph.D. from Emory University, and has taught at the University of Otago in Dunedin, New Zealand, and at Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts. She served as Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Cognition and Development and as an advisor to the longitudinal birth cohort study Growing Up in New Zealand. She is currently leading a national early childhood education study called "Kia Timata Pai: The Best Start Study", and her book for parents is called Tell Me a Story:

Sharing Stories to Enrich Your Child's Life (Oxford, 2013). She is an elected Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand/Te Aparangi.

Summary

In recent years, gold-standard experimental evidence on the benefits of reading fiction has exploded. Why do we love stories from books, TV and movies, and videogames? What do fictional stories have to do with stories from real life? How do stories impact our own and our children's brain development, reading skills, social understanding, and well-being?

In How Stories Change Us, Elaine Reese integrates the latest scientific research on stories from fiction (books, TV shows and movies, videogames) with stories from real life (our personal experiences, including on social media) across the lifespan. The book offers an authoritative yet accessible overview of the new interdisciplinary science of stories, told by a developmental psychologist and autobiographical memory expert with over thirty years of experience conducting research on stories. Throughout, Reese adopts a developmental perspective by tracing the impact of stories from pre-birth to old age. Drawing upon illustrative examples from her 20-year longitudinal study Origins of Memory as well as from her own life, Reese synthesizes cutting-edge research on the benefits and pitfalls of stories and offers practical tips for parents, teachers, librarians, and policymakers.

Reese concludes that people have a preferred fictional story delivery system, whether it's reading, watching, or gaming, and she advocates for a more integrated science of stories to allow us to better choose the stories we consume and tell.

Additional text

As a psychological scientist who loves stories, Elaine Reese is the perfect person to tell the story of the science of stories. In this engaging and deeply researched book, she describes the development of our relationship with stories across the human life course, beginning even in the womb as we hear our mother's narrating voice. Stories change us, and they teach us how to be human. With great authority and compassion, Professor Reese conveys abiding insights about human development, parenting, gender, and family relationships, and she provides practical advice regarding the promise and the perils of storytelling in today's world.

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