Category Archives: Narrative Inquiry

Narrative journals

Having just been to the Narrative Matters 2010 conference, I am reminded of the following journals which may be useful for those narratively-inclined:

Narrative Inquiry

Narrative Works — a new journal coming out of the Centre for Interdisciplinary Research  on narrative (CIRN) at St Thomas University, New Brunswick, Canada. the first issue is scheduled for January 2010. This is how the journal was announced at the NM2010 conference:

At the conference, the Centre will announce the establishment of Narrative Works: Issues, Investigations, & Interventions, an online, open-access, peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary journal committed to exploring the complex role of narrative in countless aspects of human life. The inaugural issue is tentatively scheduled for January 2011.

Storytelling, Self, Society: An interdiciplinary journal of storytelling studies

Storyworlds: A journal of narrative studies

Book chapter by Eljee Javier (informed by her MA Dissertation)

 

Javier, E. (2010). ‘Foreign-ness’, Race and the Native Speaker. In D. Nunan, D. and J. Choi (eds.), Language and culture: Reflective narratives and the emergence of identity. Routledge.

 

LTE’s Julian Edge also has a chapter in this volume:

 

Edge, J. (2010). Elaborating the monolingual deficit. In D. Nunan, D. and J. Choi (eds.), Language and culture: Reflective narratives and the emergence of identity. Routledge.

TESOL Quarterly – Special Issue on Narrative Research

http://www.tesol.org/s_tesol/docs/TQCallforAbstractsSept.pdf

Some of LTE”s narrativists have submitted proposals for this special issue.

For example, Richard Fay, Tanya Halldorsdottir, Eljee Javier, Tzu-Hsuan Liu, and Xiaowei Zhou.

More information on these proposals shortly.

Narrative Matters 2010

Narrative Inquiry (NI) has great potential for TESOL practitioners – such as those on the MA TESOL and MA EdTech & TESOL programmes – as they reflect on their own practice and their students’ second language learning biographies. NI is an area in which the LTE group has interests, especially Richard Fay, his PhD students, and his research collaborators elsewhere.

 

Four proposals from this group of narrative inquirists have been submitted for papers to be presented at “Narrative Matters 2010 – Exploring the narrative landscape: Issues, investigations, and interventions” to be hosted by the CIRN in Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada, May 20th – 22nd 2010:

 

Fay, R., Zhou, X. and Liu, T-H. (forthcoming, 2010). Undertaking narrative inquiry bilingually against a monolingual backdrop.  

 

Halldórsdóttir, T. (forthcoming, 2010).  Text and counterText: Beyond the Telling…  

 

Javier, E. (forthcoming, 2010). Finding one’s own voice – Balancing the views of the researcher within narrative inquiry when exploring race and teacher identity in an EFL context.

 

 

Conference Details

The title of the 2010 conference is “Exploring the Narrative Landscape: Issues, Investigations, and Interventions.”

 

Keynote speakers include three well known scholars in narrative and related areas: Dr. Ruthellen Josselson, Dr. Kenneth Gergen, and Dr. Mary Gergen.

 

The conference is being organized by CIRN and will be held from May 20-22, 2010, at the Delta Hotel, Fredericton, NB, Canada – the same venue, in fact, where Narrative Matters 2002 and 2004 were held.

 

Feel free to check our website (www.stu.ca/cirn) for more information concerning the conference. Should you have any questions regarding the conference, please email us at narrativeconference@stu.ca 

Past Narrative Inquiry Conferences

Past Narrative Inquiry conferences:

2008 Narrative Matters 2008

 http://www.narrativematters.com/
Toronto, Ontario, Canada

 

Storying Our World
As humans we continually story our experiences. We construct our world through our personal, community, institutional and political narratives. The 2008 Narrative Matters conference theme aims to explore all of these narrative sites. Narrative continues to gain recognition as something people do, use and research. The Narrative Matters conference provides a meeting place for people interested in doing, using and researching narrative in diverse contexts and fields. The blurring and crossing of boundaries catalyzes discussion and inquiry at Narrative Matters conferences.

 

 

 

2008 Georgetown Round Table

http://www8.georgetown.edu/college/gurt/2008/theme.html

 

Telling Stories: Building bridges among Language, Narrative, Identity, Interaction, Society and Culture

Narratives have been studied in many different disciplines: linguistics, literary theory, clinical psychology, cognitive and developmental psychology, folklore, anthropology, sociology and history.

The primary focus of GURT 2008 is the linguistic study of narrative, especially as it has developed within discourse analysis and sociolinguistics.

         As our theme suggests, however, studying the language of narrative can take us far afield to other concerns: the construction of self and identity; the differences among spoken, written and computer-mediated discourse; the role that small and big (e.g. life) stories play in everyday social interactions; the contribution of narrative to social status, roles and meanings within institutional settings as varied as therapeutic and medical encounters, education, politics, media, marketing and public relations.

         Thus, GURT 2008 will be a forum for building interconnections among language, narrative and social life.