NARRATIVES IN INTERGENERATIONAL COMMUNICATION: COLLABORATING WITH THE OTHER

被引:1
|
作者
Kielkiewicz-Janowiak, Agnieszka [1 ]
机构
[1] Adam Mickiewicz Univ, Coll Novum, Fac English, PL-61874 Poznan, Poland
关键词
Narratives; ageing; intergenerational; decline discourse; episodic interview; SMALL STORIES; OLDER-ADULTS; AGE; ATTITUDES;
D O I
10.1515/psicl-2012-0005
中图分类号
H0 [语言学];
学科分类号
030303 ; 0501 ; 050102 ;
摘要
In a setting featuring communicators of different generations, linguistic variation co-occurs with strongly categorizing expectations shaped by normative views of age identities, roles and discourses. On the other hand, social actors consciously use linguistic means to achieve a variety of ends, for example claiming common or distinct ground (with/from others) by sharing or contesting meanings. Narrative is one of these means. In the context researched here it involves not only life course accounts or longer autobiographic narratives, but also small stories (cf. Bamberg and Georgakopoulou 2008). Although researchers (e.g. Kemper et al. 1989) found an age-related decrement in the complexity of stories told by adults, which is due to working memory limitations, intergenerational conversations are full of narratives which the older and the younger co-produce. In a set of interviews, interlocutors of disparate generations shared stories on a variety of topics. The qualitative analysis focused on the mechanisms of the stories being collaboratively produced and the patterns of participants taking on their telling roles. In the results, the short, personal narratives are shown to be the interactional achievement of communicative goals. Storytelling in interaction is an individual self-projection, shaped by specific social values and drawn from specific cultural resources, and, importantly, accomplished together with the interlocutor.
引用
收藏
页码:77 / 101
页数:25
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Technologies for intergenerational family communication
    Abrantes, Carolina
    Amaro, Ana Carla
    Baldi, Vania
    2017 12TH IBERIAN CONFERENCE ON INFORMATION SYSTEMS AND TECHNOLOGIES (CISTI), 2017,
  • [22] Narratives and cancer communication
    Green, Melanie C.
    JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION, 2006, 56 : S163 - S183
  • [23] Facing Death: Family Therapy Narratives and Intergenerational Echoes
    Tisher, Miriam
    Nichterlein, Maria
    AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF FAMILY THERAPY, 2022, 43 (03) : 368 - 380
  • [24] Functions of Parental Intergenerational Narratives Told by Young People
    Merrill, Natalie
    Booker, Jordan A.
    Fivush, Robyn
    TOPICS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCE, 2019, 11 (04) : 752 - 773
  • [25] CPATH: Distributed Expertise - Collaborating with Other Disciplines
    Cassel, Lillian N.
    Way, Thomas
    Potluri, Sridhara
    ITICSE 2009: PROCEEDING OF THE 2009 ACM SIGSE ANNUAL CONFERENCE ON INNOVATION AND TECHNOLOGY IN COMPUTER SCIENCE EDUCATION, 2009, : 382 - 382
  • [26] Learning together: Collaborating with other university students
    Bonati, M.
    Gadow, F.
    JOURNAL OF INTELLECTUAL DISABILITY RESEARCH, 2016, 60 (7-8) : 640 - 640
  • [27] Two Narratives of Intergenerational Sustainability: A Framework for Sustainable Thinking
    Moldavanova, Alisa
    AMERICAN REVIEW OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION, 2016, 46 (05): : 526 - 545
  • [28] Ethnic subjectivity in intergenerational memory narratives: The politics of the untold
    Piazza, Roberta
    NARRATIVE INQUIRY, 2022, 32 (02) : 456 - 459
  • [29] Ethnic Subjectivity in Intergenerational Memory Narratives: Politics of the Untold
    Agardi, Izabella
    HUNGARIAN CULTURAL STUDIES, 2021, 14 : 214 - 217
  • [30] Obstacles to intergenerational communication in caregivers' narratives regarding young people's sexual and reproductive health and lifestyle in rural South Africa
    Nilsson, Bo
    Edin, Kerstin
    Kinsman, John
    Kahn, Kathleen
    Norris, Shane A.
    BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, 2020, 20 (01)