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Narrative As Social Practice: Anglo-western and Australian Aboriginal Oral Traditions (Language, Power, and Social Process, 13)
 
 
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Narrative As Social Practice: Anglo-western and Australian Aboriginal Oral Traditions (Language, Power, and Social Process, 13) [Paperback]

Daniele M. Klapproth (Author), Monica Heller (Editor), Richard J. Watts (Editor)

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Book Description

August 2004 3110181371 978-3110181371
Narrative as Social Practice sets out to explore the complex and fascinating interrelatedness of narrative and culture. It does so by contrasting the oral storytelling traditions of two widely divergent cultures? Anglo-Western culture and the Central Australian culture of the Pitjantjatjara/Yankunytjatjara Aborigines. Combining discourse-analytical and pragmalinguistic methodologies with the perspectives of ethnopoetics and the ethnography of communication, this book presents a highly original and engaging study of storytelling as a vital communicative activity at the heart of socio-cultural life. The book is concerned with both theoretical and empirical issues. It engages critically with the theoretical framework of social constructivism and the notion of social practice, and it offers critical discussions of the most influential theories of narrative put forward in Western thinking. Arguing for the adoption of a communication-oriented and cross-cultural perspective as a prerequisite for improving our understanding of the cultural variability of narrative practice, Klapproth presents detailed textual analyses of Anglo-Western and Australian Aboriginal oral narratives, and contextualizes them with respect to the different storytelling practices, values and worldviews in both cultures. Narrative as Social Practice offers new insights to students and specialists in the fields of narratology, discourse analysis, cross-cultural pragmatics, anthropology, folklore study, the ethnography of communication, and Australian Aboriginal studies.

Editorial Reviews

Review

"This book is a useful reference for those who are interested in the theoretical and methodological issues in contrastive study of narrative, and particulary for those who carry out research into the linguistic and cultural pratices of Australian Aborigines."Judy Woon Yee Ho in: Discourse & Society 2/2006

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Some years ago I decided to venture on a journey of exploration that was to take me far away from my native home grounds. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
cultural core concepts, intonational sentence, narrative conceptualisation, retracing section, matrix episode, narratological research, term tjukurpa, criteria for good narratives, episodic analysis, story schemata, storytelling act, kangaroo episode, story corpus, narrated world, text building strategies, pause units, new beginning event, animate protagonist, story organisation, cognitive science framework, nightly exploits, canonical episode, larger discourse context, core problematic, embedded episodes
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Australian Aboriginal, Western Desert, Tjitji Maluringanvi, Tjitji Maluringanyi, Central Australian, Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara, Kutarara Pula-Stories, Snow White, Aboriginal Australia, Dell Hymes, Kungka Kutjara, Sleeping Beauty, Arnhem Land, Billy of Fregon, The Frog Prince, Wati Kutjara, Catherine Berndt, Native Alaskan, Native American, Son Who Told, Cliff Goddard, South Australia, Star Wars, Abduction Stories, Anangu Pitjantjatjara
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