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Pathologies in Narrative Structures1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 August 2007

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Per Aage Brandt, commenting on a passage from Merlin Donald, suggests that there is ‘a narrative aesthetics built into our mind.’ In Donald, one can find an evolutionary account of this narrative aesthetics. If there is something like an innate narrative disposition, it is also surely the case that there is a process of development involved in narrative practice. In this paper I will assume something closer to the developmental account provided by Jerome Bruner in various works, and Dan Hutto's account of how we learn narrative practices, and I'll refer to this narrative aesthetics as a narrative competency that we come to have through a developmental process. I will take narrative in a wide sense, to include oral and written communications and self-reports on experience. In this regard narrative is more basic than story, and not necessarily characterized by the formal plot structure of a story. A story may be told in many different ways, but always via narrative discourse. Also, having narrative competency includes not just abilities for understanding narratives, but also for narrative understanding, which allows us to form narratives about things, events and other people. To be capable of narrative understanding means to be capable of seeing events in a narrative framework.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy and the contributors 2007

Footnotes

1

An earlier version of this paper was originally presented as ‘The Success and Failure of Narrative,’ a plenary lecture at the conference Language Culture And Mind: Integrating Perspectives And Methodologies In The Study of Language, Paris, 18 July 2006.

References

1 An earlier version of this paper was originally presented as ‘The Success and Failure of Narrative,’ a plenary lecture at the conference Language Culture And Mind: Integrating Perspectives And Methodologies In The Study of Language, Paris, 18 July 2006.