Literature DB >> 12769510

Narrating troubling experiences.

Linda C Garro1.   

Abstract

This article presents a process-oriented perspective that relates to the broad question of how self-related experience comes to be endowed with meaning. The approach highlights the implications of 'living by' particular culturally based understandings in specific contexts and centers on how jointly cultural, social, and cognitive processes offer potentialities for orienting the experiential self without determining self-related experiences. This process-oriented perspective revolves around the interplay between the range of historically contingent cultural resources available for endowing experience with meaning and the socially and structurally grounded processes through which individuals learn about, orient towards and traffic in interpretive plausibilities--a socially situated experientially based process. This perspective is informed by, and provides an entree for exploring, variability within a cultural setting. The narrative accounts examined are from individuals who grew up speaking either Ojibwa or Cree (both Algonkian languages) in First Nations communities in Manitoba, Canada.

Mesh:

Year:  2003        PMID: 12769510     DOI: 10.1177/1363461503040001001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Transcult Psychiatry        ISSN: 1363-4615


  3 in total

1.  Cultural competence and psychotherapy: Applying anthropologically informed conceptions of culture.

Authors:  Kimberly Lakes; Steven R López; Linda C Garro
Journal:  Psychotherapy (Chic)       Date:  2006

2.  Transforming Health Experience and Action through Shifting the Narrative on Obesity in Primary Care Encounters.

Authors:  Thea Luig; Louanne Keenan; Denise L Campbell-Scherer
Journal:  Qual Health Res       Date:  2019-10-16

3.  Giving an account of one's pain in the anthropological interview.

Authors:  Mara Buchbinder
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2010-03
  3 in total

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