Narrative Culture, Volume 3, Number 1, Spring 2016
Narrative Culture claims narration as a broad and pervasive human practice, warranting a holistic perspective to grasp its place comparatively across time and space. Inviting contributions that document, discuss and theorize narrative culture, the journal seeks to offer a platform that integrates approaches spread across numerous disciplines. The field of narrative culture thus outlined is defined by a large variety of forms of popular narratives, including not only oral and written texts, but also narratives in images, three-dimensional art, customs, rituals, drama, dance, music, and so forth.
Table of Contents
Narrative Culture
Volume 3, Number 1, Spring 2016
Embroidered Palestine: A Stitched Narrative
Hagar Salamon
A Telling Place: Narrative and the Construction of Locality in a Bengali Village
Frank J. Korom
Narrative Maps, Collective Memory, and Identities: Through an Ethnographic Example from the Southeast Aegean
Marilena Papachristophorou
Medium and Narrative Change: The Effects of Multiple Media on the "Glasgow Girls" Story and Their Real-Life Campaign
Emma Hill and Máiréad Nic Craith
Ecotypes: Theory of the Lived and Narrated Experience
Galit Hasan-Rokem