bruner's narrative framework

9
NARRATIVE FRAMEWORK Dr. Pamela Rutledge Brand Psychology & Transmedia Storytelling [email protected] JEROME BRUNER’S

Upload: pamela-rutledge-phd-mba

Post on 21-Jan-2017

838 views

Category:

Marketing


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Bruner's Narrative Framework

NARRATIVE FRAMEWORKDr. Pamela Rutledge

Brand Psychology & Transmedia [email protected]

JEROME BRUNER’S

Page 2: Bruner's Narrative Framework

Paradigmatic knowing uses reasoned analysis, logical proof, and empirical observation. We use it to explain cause and effect, to predict and to create unambiguous truths that can be proven or disproved.

Narrative knowledge is created and constructed through the stories we tell about lived experiences and the meanings we create from them. We use narrative knowing to help make sense out of ambiguity and the complexity of human lives.

WAYS OF KNOWING: PARADIGMATIC AND NARRATIVE2

Page 3: Bruner's Narrative Framework

‘to narrate’ derives from

both ‘telling’ (narrare)

and ‘knowing in some

particular way’ (gnarus)

- the two tangled

beyond sorting’

Page 4: Bruner's Narrative Framework

• NARRATIVES– Combines the recounting of events with a specific understanding

of them. – Is more than sequencing of events; it is a form of meaning-making

• STORIES– Narratives that have sequential and temporal ordering – Have some kind of rupture or disturbance in the normal course of

events, some kind of unexpected action that provokes a reaction and/or adjustment

– Have context, characters, plot, place, turning point– Mean something to the teller

• TERMS OFTEN USED INTERCHANGEABLY IN PRACTICE

DEFINING NARRATIVE AND STORIES

Page 5: Bruner's Narrative Framework

10 MAIN IDEASThe Human Mind Structures Reality

Through Cultural Products and Symbolic Systems 1. Time2. Specific vs. General3. People + Events = People Explained4. Dependent upon ability to interpret them5. Normal and Different6. What feels right vs. what ‘fact’7. Genre8. Confirms cultural norms9. Context of background knowledge10. Narrative accrual

Page 6: Bruner's Narrative Framework

1. Narrative diachronicity: The notion that narratives take place over some sense of time.2. Particularity: Narratives deal with particular events, although some events may be left

vague and general3. Intentional state entailment: Within a narrative, characters have intention, i.e. "beliefs,

desires, theories, values, and so on”4. Hermeneutic composability: Narratives are a selected series of events that can be

interpreted as a "story.” 5. Canonicity and breach: Stories are about something unusual happening that "breaches"

the canonical or normal state.6. Referentiality: A story in some way references reality; narrative truth can offer verisimilitude

but not verifiability. Veracity versus verisimilitude or Narratives “feel” true.7. Genericness: The flip side to particularity, where the story can be classified as a genre which

frames meaning.8. Normativeness: Narrative supposes a social norm. This follows from canonicity and breach.9. Context sensitivity and negotiability: Requires an implicit negotiated role between author

and reader, including reader understanding of context to the narrative and agreement to suspend disbelief.

10.Narrative accrual: Stories are cumulative; new stories follow from older ones

BRUNER’S 10 SIDES TO NARRATIVE

Page 7: Bruner's Narrative Framework

THE THREE LITTLE PIGS

Page 8: Bruner's Narrative Framework

1. Narrative diachronicity: The three pigs story takes place in a sequence. In particular, we see the wolf moving from the straw to sticks to brick in accordance with the pig’s effort and work ethic

2. Particularity: The story deals with the wolf’s attacks on the pigs house, not how the pigs get food or how they learned to play the cute instruments.

3. Intentional state entailment: The story makes it clear that the wolf is ‘bad,’ and is in pursuit of the pigs, as well as the motivations of the pigs

4. Hermeneutic composability: The events presented are linked in such as way that we know them to be related and to further the story

5. Canonicity and breach: The three pigs is a morality play, so the breach occurs when the pigs build substandard houses putting themselves at risk of the wolf’s ability to blow their houses down.

6. Referentiality: While this is a cartoon and a fairy tale, we recognize the truth in hard work paying off and making us safer

7. Genericness: We recognize the cartoon as having comedic references and the morality play as giving us a message

8. Normativeness: The story reinforces the ethic of hard work and the lesson that it pays off9. Context sensitivity and negotiability: We recognize this as a story and are willing to participate in

the lesson without being overly critical of the unrealistic elements, such as pigs talking, wolves blowing down houses, etc.

10.Narrative accrual: This story builds on what we believe about wolves being dangerous, morals of hard work, the relative strength of different building materials and the relationships within families.

BRUNER’S 10 SIDES TO THREE LITTLE PIGS

Page 9: Bruner's Narrative Framework

NARRATIVE FRAMEWORKDr. Pamela Rutledge

Media Psychology Research Center [email protected]

JEROME BRUNER’S