An Autobiographical Memoir
In: Perspectives on political science, Band 45, Heft 2, S. 106-112
ISSN: 1930-5478
1694 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Perspectives on political science, Band 45, Heft 2, S. 106-112
ISSN: 1930-5478
In: Narrative inquiry: a forum for theoretical, empirical, and methodological work on narrative, Band 21, Heft 2, S. 303-310
ISSN: 1569-9935
In this contribution I discuss the link existing between autobiographical memory and autobiographical narrative and, in this context, the concept of coherence. Starting from the Bruner's seminal concept of autobiographical self, I firstly analyze how autobiographical memories and autobiographical narrative influence each other and, somehow, mirror reciprocally and then I present some results of my previous studies using a methodology consisting in "narrating-transcribing-reading-narrating." The results show that self narratives can have positive effects on the narrators if they are provided with a tool to reflect on their memories. Moreover these results show that autobiography in its double sides — that of memory and that of narrative — is a process of continuous construction but also that this construction is deeply linked to social interactions.
In: Memory, mind & media: MMM, Band 3
ISSN: 2635-0238
Abstract
Autobiographical memories play a vital role in shaping personal identity. Therefore, individuals often use various methods like diaries and photographs to preserve precious memories. Tattoos also serve as a means of remembering, yet their role in autobiographical memory has received limited attention in research. To address this gap, we surveyed 161 adults (68.9 per cent female, M = 26.93, SD = 6.57) to explore the life events that motivated their tattoos and to examine their most significant memories. We then compared these findings with significant memories of 185 individuals without tattoos (80.0 per cent female, M = 31.26, SD = 15.34). The results showed that the majority of tattoos were inspired by unique life events, including specific events about personal growth, relationships, leisure activities, losses, or diseases. Even when not directly tied to specific events in life, tattoos still reflect autobiographical content, such as mottos, beliefs, and values. Furthermore, the most significant memories of younger tattooed individuals (20–24 years) tended to be more normative and less stressful compared to those of their non-tattooed counterparts in the same age group, though the nature of these memories varied. This difference was not found among older participants (30–54 years). Additionally, those without tattoos indicated to use specific objects and methods for preserving important events, suggesting tattoos are only one of several ways to reminisce. However, tattoos uniquely allow for the physical embodiment of autobiographical memories, indicating that engraving significant life events in the skin aids in reflecting on one's life story.
Autobiographical memory plays a key role in psychological well-being, and the field has been investigated from multiple perspectives for over thirty years. One large body of research has examined the basic mechanisms and characteristics of autobiographical memory during general cognition, and another body has studied what happens to it during psychological disorders, and how psychological therapies targeting memory disturbances can improve psychological well-being. This edited collection reviews and integrates current theories on autobiographical memory when viewed in a clinical perspective. It presents an overview of basic applied and clinical approaches to autobiographical memory, covering memory specificity, traumatic memories, involuntary and intrusive memories and the role of self-identity. The book discusses a wide range of psychological disorders, including depression, PTSD, borderline personality disorder and autism, and how they affect autobiographical memory. It will be of interest to students of psychology, clinicians and therapists alike.
In: Gender studies, Band 21, Heft 1, S. 27-44
ISSN: 2286-0134
Abstract
This article discusses the representations and narratives of transmasculinities in selected works by contemporary Anglophone nonbinary writers assigned female at birth. After briefly introducing the primary sources, I explain how this selection of texts allows for an analysis that contributes to widening the conventional conceptualisation of masculinities as related only to biological men and trans men, and I specify the kinds of masculinities discussed in the article. I then concentrate on three prominently featured themes in the analysed narratives: rejection and erasure within the lesbian and feminist communities, confusion caused by the authors' identities in their everyday lives, and nonbinary parenting-related issues. Exploring how the authors write about these themes illuminates not only how they textually construct their diverse masculinities but also some of the key challenges they navigate: identity unintelligibility, invisibility, and the threat of involuntary complicity in the patriarchal order.
In: Interventions
Falling and flying : an introduction / Naeem Inayatullah -- 1. Accidental scholarship and the myth of objectivity / Stephen Chan -- 2. Objects among objects / Jenny Edkins -- 3. Stammers between silence and speech / Narendran Kumarakulasingam -- 4. Scenes of obscenity : the meaning of America under epistemic and military violence / Khadija F. El Alaoui -- 5. I, the double soldier : an autobiographic case-study on the pitfalls of dual citizenship / Rainer Hulsse -- 6. Weakness leaving my body : an essay on the interpersonal relations of international politics / Jacob L. Stump -- 7. Waiting for the revolution : a foreigner's narrative / Alina Sajed -- 8. Am I not that? : at the feet of elders / Sara-Maria Sorentino -- 9. Listening for the elsewhere and the not-yet : academic labor as a matter of ethical witness / Lori Amy -- 10. To realize you're creolized : white flight, black culture, hybridity / Joel Dinerstein -- 11. Goodbye nostalgia! : in memory of a country that never existed as such / Wanda Vrasti -- 12. Shaping walls : moving through Lanka's forts / Nethra Samarawickrema -- 13. Three stories : a way of being in the world / Patrick Thaddeus Jackson -- 14. G(r)azing the fields of IR : romping buffaloes, festive villagers / Quynh Pham and Himadeep Muppidi -- 15. The sound of conversation / Sorayya Khan -- Cosmography recapitulates biography : an epilogue / Peter Mandaville.
In: Interventions
This volume provides a novel approach to international relations. In the course of fifteen essays, scholars write about how life events brought them to their subject matter. They place their narratives in the larger context of world politics, culture, and history. This book moves the field of International Relations towards greater candidness about how personal narrative influences theoretical articulations. No such volume currently exists in the field of international relations.
In: Jerusalem-Harvard Lectures
In: The Jerusalem-Harvard Lectures
Intro -- Contents -- Overture -- 1. Philosophy and the Arrogation of Voice -- 2. Counter-Philosophy and the Pawn of Voice -- The Metaphysical Voice -- Worlds of Philosophical Difference -- Pictures of Destruction -- Derrida's Austin and the Stake of Positivism -- Exclusion of the Theory of Excuses: On the Tragic -- Exclusion of the Theory of the Non-Serious -- Skepticism and the Serious -- Two Pictures of Communication: Assigning -- What (Thing) Is Transmitted? Austin Moves -- Two Pictures of Language in Relation to (the) World -- Three Pictures of My Attachment to My Words: Signing -- 3. Opera and the Lease of Voice -- Bibliography -- Acknowledgments -- Subject Index -- Name Index.
In: Australian feminist studies, Band 37, Heft 111, S. 21-36
ISSN: 1465-3303
In: Ab imperio: studies of new imperial history and nationalism in the Post-Soviet space, Band 2018, Heft 4, S. 29-41
ISSN: 2164-9731
In: Hypatia: a journal of feminist philosophy, Band 32, Heft 1, S. 187-192
ISSN: 1527-2001
In: Studies in symbolic interaction, Band 39, S. 51-69