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Journal ArticleDOI

Narrativity, Self, and Self-Representation

James L. Battersby
- 01 Jan 2006 - 
- Vol. 14, Iss: 1, pp 27-44
TLDR
Strawson as discussed by the authors argued that the self, considered as a self, is a "now" phenomenon disconnected from the past and the future, and an attack against the prevailing Diachronie approach to self experience.
Abstract
In the December 2004 issue of Ratio, Galen Strawson published an important essay in which he mounted a groundbreaking attack against what has become virtu ally the standard view of how we construe our lives: the narrative identity thesis, which insists that our identity is a function of the story that we construct about our selves. Specifically, he forcefully challenges both the descriptive and normative as pects of the thesis, the judgment, on the one hand, that, in Oliver Sacks's words, "each of us constructs and lives a narrative" (105), and the judgment, on the other, that, as Marya Schechtman puts it, we ought to construct our lives narratively, that, indeed, we must do so to achieve full personhood (119). The overall argument of Strawson's piece divides into two major sections, each of which has two parts: (1) a defense of what he calls an Episodic approach to self-experience, in which the self, considered as self, is a "now" phenomenon disconnected from the past and the future, and an attack against what he calls the prevailing Diachronie approach to self experience, in which the self, considered as a self, is understood to persist in time from the past into the future; and (2) a defense of a non-Narrative form of self-repre sentation and an attack against the dominance of the Narrative form of self-represen tation. The aim of Strawson's case at large is to reconfigure the terms and the conditions of the discussion of the relations obtaining between the self and its repre sentation. In my view, one cannot read this piece without being impressed by its icon oclastic turn, by its temerity in facing down the almost universal endorsement of the narrative identity thesis, and by its unflinching insistence that the Episodic/non Narrative approach to self-representation has equal standing with the Diachronie/ Narrative approach, that in point of fact it just might be, primus inter pares.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The limits of narrative: provocations for the medical humanities

TL;DR: It is argued that ‘Against Narrativity’ can and should stimulate robust debate within the medical humanities regarding the limits of narrative, and a range of possibilities for venturing ‘beyond narrative’ are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

The transmediated self Life between the digital and the analog

TL;DR: It is argued that in the age of networked connectivity, self-identity is being fashioned according to the aesthetics of transmedia production, and reveals a transmediated self constituted as a browsable story-world that is integrated, dispersed, episodic, and interactive.
Journal ArticleDOI

Narrative and Human Existence: Ontology, Epistemology, and Ethics

TL;DR: This article argued that both experience and narrative are phenomena constituted by interpretative activity, and that narrative interpretations of experiences have a constitutive role in our existence, while epistemological and ontological assumptions concerning what is counted as real are implicit assumptions concerning all three dimensions.

Working with identities - promoting student teachers' professional development

TL;DR: In this paper, a study was conducted to promote student teachers' professional development with the help of identity work, which consists of self-reflection on student teacher's life experiences (self-identity), and video diary-based reflection on student teachers's classroom practice (professional identity).
Journal ArticleDOI

Narrative Identity and Narrative Imperialism: A Response to Galen Strawson and James Phelan

Paul John Eakin
- 25 Apr 2006 - 
TL;DR: This paper defined narrative identity as "the notion that what we are is a story of some kind." Before investigating its social and somatic sources, I added that I regarded this idea as "counterintuitive and even extravagant." James Phelan liked my characterization of narrative identity enough to quote it twice in an article of his own in Narrative last October.
References
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Book

Sources of the Self: The Making of the Modern Identity

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the conflicts of modernity and modernity's relationship with the self in moral space and the providential order of nature, and present a list of the main sources of conflict.
Book

Making Stories: Law, Literature, Life

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the uses of the story, the legal and the literary, and the creation of self in the form of a story, and so why narrative.
Book

The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat and Other Clinical Tales

Oliver Sacks
TL;DR: In his most extraordinary book, "one of the great clinical writers of the 20th century" recounts the case histories of patients lost in the bizarre, apparently inescapable world of neurological disorders.