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  2. Personal narrative - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_narrative

    Personal narratives make a statement: "what you must know about me," and these stories are traded more frequently as traders grow closer, and reach milestones in the relationships. [2] There is an obligation to trading personal narratives, an expectation of being kept in the loop that Harvey Sachs calls a symptom of "being close." [2]

  3. Digital Archive of Literacy Narratives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_Archive_of...

    The original purpose of DALN, as stated by its creators, was to create an accessible collection of literacy narratives for the purpose of literacy research. [3] With origins in writing studies research, its creators sought to capture the development of narratives, to challenge notable definitions of literacy, and create a dynamic way for collaborators, readers and researchers to interact. [3]

  4. Narrative identity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narrative_Identity

    Charlotte Linde's definition of personal experience narrative is quintessential to the idea of narrative identity and is evidence into how these stories and the process of telling them craft the framework for one's own identity. Personal narrative is a powerful tool for creating, negotiating and displaying the moral standing of the self. The ...

  5. List of narrative forms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_narrative_forms

    Narrative forms have been subject to classification by literary theorists, in particular during the 1950s, a period which has been described metaphorically as the Linnaean period in the study of narrative. [1] Epistolary - a story usually in a letter written form with a section of dialogue; Narrative forms include:

  6. Storytelling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Storytelling

    All personal narratives are seen as ideological because they evolve from a structure of power relations and simultaneously produce, maintain and reproduce that power structure". [ 63 ] Political theorist, Hannah Arendt argues that storytelling transforms private meaning to public meaning. [ 64 ]

  7. Narrative - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narrative

    A narrative is a telling of some actual or fictitious event or connected sequence of events, sometimes recounted by a narrator to an audience (although there may be more than one of each). A personal narrative is a prose narrative relating personal experience. Narratives are to be distinguished from descriptions of qualities, states, or ...

  8. List of writing genres - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_writing_genres

    Biography: a written narrative of a person's life; an autobiography is a self-written biography. Memoir: a biographical account of a particular event or period in a person's life (rather than their whole life) drawn from personal knowledge or special sources (such as the spouse of the subject). Misery literature; Slave narrative. Contemporary ...

  9. Autoethnography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autoethnography

    With the critic's general decree of narrative as narcissism, Adams, Jones, and Ellis use the first goal of assessing autoethnography to explain the importance of striving to combine personal experience and existing theory while remaining mindful of the "insider insight that autoethnography offers researchers, participants, and readers/audiences."