Narrative Psychology: The Storied Nature of Human ConductTheodore R. Sarbin This book features essays by the major supporters of the narrative metaphor. They approach the subject from philosophical, religious, anthropological, and historical perspectives as well as from the psychological point of view. Psychologists, psychiatrists, and literary theorists will find the book provocative and a convenient reference source to the narrative approach. |
Contents
The Narrative as a Root Metaphor for Psychology | 3 |
Narrative Form and the Construction of 22 | 22 |
Grafton Elliot | 45 |
Copyright | |
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Other editions - View all
Narrative Psychology: The Storied Nature of Human Conduct Theodore R. Sarbin No preview available - 1986 |
Common terms and phrases
action adult adventure analysis become behavior Brian Sutton-Smith cataclysm causal caw caw caw chapter character child clinical cognitive coherence concept construction context Crites cultural developmental discourse Don Quixote dramatic ego psychology Elliot Smith emplotment epigenetic episode example experience fact fiction Freud function future Gail Sheehy Gergen goal Grafton Elliot Smith Hayden White hermeneutic hero human identity interpretation interview Jung kind language learning listen lives Mancuso Mandler meaning Mishler narrative figure narrative form narrative grammar narrative psychologies narrative smoothing narrative structure narrative thinking narrativist narrator neopallium observation one's paranoid past person perspective play plot possibility present primitive problem progressive narrative psychoanalysis question reading recollection reconstruction response role root metaphor Samuel Smiles Sarbin scientific self-narrative sense Sheehy Sheehy's social psychology sport story maker story structure storytelling superego Sutton-Smith tell textual theme theory truth understanding York