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CULTURE, NARRATIVE, AND THE POETIC CONSTRUCTION OF SELFHOOD
66
Citations
13
References
1999
Year
Literary TheoryExistentialismPersonal IdentityLiterary CriticismComparative LiteratureRecent ExplorationsNarrative And IdentitySocial ConstructionismPoeticsLanguage StudiesCultural TextPersonal ExperienceCultural StudiesSocial SciencesLife Writing
Recent explorations of the relationship between narrative and self, particularly those tied to social constructionism, have served as a valuable corrective to the still prevalent tendency in psychology to divorce the self from its social surround. Yet certain of these explorations, by privileging the social over the individual, have led to a vision of selfhood that is problematic in its own right. Specifically, it is argued that, even though the "tools" employed in the construction of selfhood are social in nature, the configurational acts through which this construction occurs are better conceived in poetic terms, as imaginative labor seeking to give form and meaning to experience. In considering the poetic construction of selfhood, this article attempts to articulate further the relationship between narrative and self, the cultural dimension of personal experience, and the importance of the idea of narrative for expanding the scope of psychological knowledge.
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