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Early talk about the past: the origins of conversational stories of personal experience
299
Citations
18
References
1988
Year
Early TalkFirst-person NarrativeLanguage DevelopmentEducationEarly Childhood LanguageNarrative And IdentityEarly Childhood EducationCommunicationPsychologySocial SciencesDevelopmental PsychologySocial Communication DisorderSocioemotional DevelopmentChildren's LiteratureChild LanguageCognitive DevelopmentSocial-emotional DevelopmentEarly Childhood ExperienceDiscourse AnalysisConversation AnalysisChild PsychologyPast EventEarly Childhood DevelopmentPersonal ExperienceLife WritingChild DevelopmentInterpersonal CommunicationNarrative Studies (Comparative Literature)Conversational StoriesDevelopmental ScienceEmotional DevelopmentSpecific Past EventsLived ExperienceTrauma In Child
ABSTRACT This paper explores children's early talk about specific distant past events and its development into conversational stories of personal experience, with special focus on its evaluative function. The data consist of longitudinal home observations of five working-class children and their mothers from ages 2; 0 to 2; 6. Results indicate that during this period the children talked primarily about negative past events, especially events of physical harm; the rate of talk about specific past events doubled; temporally-ordered sequences increased dramatically; and the children became better able to accomplish such talk independently. In addition, one of the most striking findings is the extent to which these 2–year-olds were able to communicate their attitude toward the past event, with speech about the past containing five times more evaluative devices than other speech. These results suggest that (1) by age 2; 6 stories of personal experience emerged in incipient form, and (2) the roots of this genre lie not only in cognitive skills and social interactional support but in the emotional significance of the depicted event.
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