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Issue Details: First known date: 2020... 2020 Incoherence/coherence in Narratives of Illness or Trauma : On the Necessity of Challenging Conventional Narrative Structures
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'Informed by my own experience of bearing witness to and being made vulnerable by a life threatening event in a loved one, this essay draws on philosophical, psychological and narratological underpinnings to investigate the gap that exists between conventional narrative structures and the narratives employed by those with lived experience of trauma or critical illness. Overall, I argue that writers and other creative artists have a responsibility to represent trauma or illness in ways that resist the temporal unification, neat closures and trajectories that often present such events as disruptions to be overcome. Following this line of thinking I argue that narrative coherence is not dependent on the cohesion of a whole. Instead it relies on the shared understandings and the process of recognition that forms between the teller and recipient of a story. In other words, coherence is dependent on the recipient’s ability to read structural characteristics such as fragmentation, discontinuity, irresolution and uncertainty not as aberrations to narrative stability, but as potential signifiers of the trauma itself. As such I suggest creative professionals can do more to experiment with the language of trauma. I conclude with a personal reflection that illustrates how knowledge of this language allows for coherence even in the most fraught narratives.'

 (Publication abstract)

 

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon TEXT : The Journal of the Australian Association of Writing Programs vol. 24 no. 1 April 2020 19275730 2020 periodical issue 'Since the last issue of TEXT in October 2019, the world changed. During Covid-19 lockdowns, arts practitioners worldwide responded with web-based music sessions, comedy performances and art exhibitions. None of these outputs sound or look like products in conventional industry spaces. There has been a discovery of the home as stage and gallery, the desk as broadcast studio, and creative arts work as a commodity related to personal space. This links us to the idea of creative work at its origin: a home-grown and personal thing given legitimacy.' (Nigel Krauth Editorial introduction) 2020
Last amended 13 May 2020 09:34:22
http://www.textjournal.com.au/april20/papas.pdf Incoherence/coherence in Narratives of Illness or Trauma : On the Necessity of Challenging Conventional Narrative Structuressmall AustLit logo TEXT : The Journal of the Australian Association of Writing Programs
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