Looking Back, Looking Forward

Auteurs-es

  • Catherine Kohler Riessman Boston University

Mots-clés :

Mentoring, biographical disruption, narrative analysis

Résumé

Responding to the honor of the festschrift, I name and honour those who guided me, especially my mentor, Elliot Mishler. I describe a path from initial fascination with the idea of a “story” to my subsequent work that expanded the study of narrative in the human sciences. Efforts to understand how individuals interpreted—made sense of—events and situations that had interrupted their lives led me to discoveries about narrative form, apparent only after close textual interactional analysis. Recently, the appeal of narrative has mushroomed; I urge scholars not to lose sight of features that distinguish it from other forms of discourse.

Références

Atkinson, P., & Delamont, S. (2006). Rescuing narrative from qualitative research. Narrative Inquiry, 16(1), 164–172.

Bury, M. (1982). Chronic illness as biographical disuption. Sociology of Health & Illness, 4(2), 167–182.

Charon, R. (2008). Narrative medicine: Honoring the stories of illness. Oxford University Press.

Gusfield, J. R. (1980). The tension between humanism and science: Sociology in the 1980s. Mid-American Review of Sociology, 5(1), 1–14.

Mishler, E. G. (1984). The discourse of medicine: Dialectics of medical interviews. Greenwood.

Mishler, E. G. (1991). Research interviewing: Context and narrative. Harvard University Press.

Mishler, E. G., & Steinitz, V. (2001, January 12–14). Solidarity work: Researchers in the struggle for social justice. [Paper presentation]. Annual Qualitative Interest Group Conference on Interdisciplinary Qualitative Studies. Athens, GA.

Mishler, E. G., with Squire, C. (2021). The personal is political: The social justice function of stories. In C. Squire (Ed.), Stories changing lives: narratives and paths toward social change. Oxford University Press.

Riessman, C. K. (1987). When gender is not enough: Women interviewing women. Gender & Society, 1(2), 172–207.

Riessman, C. K. (2000a). Stigma and everyday resistance practices: Childless women in South India. Gender & Society, 14(1), 111–135.

Riessman, C. K. (2000b). “Even if we don’t have children [we] can live”: Stigma and infertility in South India. In C. Mattingly & L. Garro (Eds.), Narratives and the cultural construction of illness and healing (pp. 128-152). University of California Press.

Riessman, C. K. (2003). Performing identities in illness narrative: Masculinity and multiple sclerosis. Qualitative Research, 3(1), 5–33.

Riessman, C. K. (2004). A thrice told tale: New readings of an old story. In B. Hurwitz, T. Greenhalgh, & V. Skultans (Eds.), Narrative research in health and illness. British Medical Association & Blackwell.

Riessman, C. K. (2005). Exporting ethics: A narrative about narrative research in South India.” Health, 9(4), 473–490.

Riessman, C. K. (2012). The pleasure of the text: Sensual and seductive aspects of narrative inquiry.” Rassegna Italiana Di Sociologia, 53(4), 1–20.

Riessman, C. K. (2015). Entering the hall of mirrors: Reflexivity and narrative research. In A. deFina and A. Georgakopoulou (Eds.), Handbook of narrative analysis. Wiley Blackwell.

Williams, G. (1984). The genesis of chronic illness: Narrative re-construction. Sociology of Health & Illnes, 6(2), 175–200.

Publié-e

2021-04-27

Comment citer

Riessman, C. K. (2021). Looking Back, Looking Forward. Narrative Works, 10, 117 – 124. Consulté à l’adresse https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/NW/article/view/31909