FONIOKOVÁ, Zuzana. The narrating-I and the experiencing-I in autobiographical narratives. In 2018 International Conference on Narrative (McGill University, Montreal). 2018.
Other formats:   BibTeX LaTeX RIS
Basic information
Original name The narrating-I and the experiencing-I in autobiographical narratives
Name in Czech Vyprávějící Já a prožívající Já v autobiografických narativech
Authors FONIOKOVÁ, Zuzana.
Edition 2018 International Conference on Narrative (McGill University, Montreal), 2018.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Presentations at conferences
Field of Study 60205 Literary theory
Country of publisher Canada
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
Organization unit Faculty of Arts
Keywords in English autobiography; narrating I; experiencing I; identity
Tags International impact, Reviewed
Changed by Changed by: Mgr. Zuzana Fonioková, Ph.D., učo 39866. Changed: 25/4/2020 21:27.
Abstract
Contemporary autobiography studies and narrative psychology claim that there is no clear boundary between the present and the past self: the autobiographical act does not correspond to a description of an already formed self, but rather to a stage of self-creation. Drawing on these discoveries, Martin Löschnigg (in “Postclassical Narratology and the Theory of Autobiography”) suggests that the traditional narratological distinction between the narrating-I and the experiencing-I might be misleading when applied to life writing, as these categories may force an artificial boundary where there really is continuity. While acknowledging the acuity of Löschnigg’s insight, my paper argues that the narrating-I vs. experiencing-I dichotomy retains its relevance when autobiographical texts are examined from a literary point of view rather than a psychological one, that is, as literary works rather than acts of identity construction. To demonstrate how the concept can enhance our understanding of narrative strategies in autobiographical texts and their different effects on readers, I identify several types of relationships between the narrator/teller position and the protagonist/experiencer position. Some autobiographical narratives (e.g. Isherwood’s Christopher and His Kind and Grass’s Peeling the Onion) highlight the difference between these two positions: the narrator distances herself from the protagonist. Texts of this type tend towards self-reflexive, meta-autobiographical commentary and appreciation of the wisdom of hindsight. Another type (e.g. Mary Karr’s memoir trilogy and Martin Walser’s A Gushing Fountain) involves an apparent closing of the gap – the narrator adopts the protagonist’s perspective and invites the reader to immerse in the depicted experience. Other narratives combine distance and closeness, such as Kominsky-Crumb’s comics where the present self’s remarks in voice-over captions contradict or comment on the past self’s perspective represented in the drawings. This double perspective helps the narrator communicate her stance (e.g. feminist views).
Links
MUNI/21/FON/2018, interní kód MUName: Narativní strategie v autobiografických textech
Investor: Masaryk University
PrintDisplayed: 27/4/2024 20:59