Article published In: Narrative Inquiry
Vol. 15:1 (2005) ► pp.161–195
Revisiting the black Jesus
Re-emplotting a narrative through multiple retellings
Published online: 28 September 2005
https://doi.org/10.1075/ni.15.1.08mcv
https://doi.org/10.1075/ni.15.1.08mcv
This article proposes that close examination of story retellings, both oral and written, can reveal a narrator's attempts to re-emplot a story in various ways. The retellings presented occurred in the context of a teacher education course where, across the semester, Ellie a white teacher, retold the same story six times. The retellings provided a unique opportunity to add to previous research on retold stories by examining differences and similarities in the six narratives that surfaced issues of culture and race related to teaching. The article also contributes methods of narrative analysis used to analyze and compare narrative structure and evaluations across the retellings. Discourse patterns revealed changes in narrative emplotment and evaluation and in the narrator's positioning of herself, a Euro-American teacher, and others, primarily African American students.
Keywords: Race, Teaching, Teacher education, Narrative, Re-telling, Re-emplotment, Positioning, Whiteness
Cited by (13)
Cited by 13 other publications
Habermas, Tilmann & Stephan Bongard
Douglas, Kristian, Demetrius Dove & Maya Brady-Ngugi
Glazier, Jocelyn & Amanda Bean
Vlach, Saba Khan, Laura Taylor & Melissa Mosley Wetzel
Armitage‐Chan, Elizabeth & Stephen A May
Järvenpää, Pirkko & Vilma Hänninen
Taylor, Laura A., Saba Khan Vlach & Melissa Mosley Wetzel
Horstman, Haley Kranstuber, Jenn Anderson & Rebecca A. Kuehl
Leal, Priscila
McVee, Mary B & Colette Carse
McVee, Mary B.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 27 november 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
