Article published In: Narrative Inquiry
Vol. 21:2 (2011) ► pp.345–352
Narrative inquiry as cultural psychology
Meaning-making in a contested global world
Published online: 5 January 2012
https://doi.org/10.1075/ni.21.2.13bha
https://doi.org/10.1075/ni.21.2.13bha
In this article, I re-examine Jerome Bruner’s vision of narrative psychology that he laid out over two decades ago. In particular, I argue that narrative inquiry must focus on identities located in sociocultural contexts of transnational movement and migration. The contact of self with multiple forms of otherness — both subtle and violent — play a significant role in identity formation. I discuss two examples from the Somalian and Indian diaspora to show how the study of these fractured, shifting, and hybridized identities provide a very valuable site from which narrative psychology has an opportunity to remake itself as a field that continues to be relevant in a world that is rapidly becoming transnational, diverse, and global.
Cited by (11)
Cited by 11 other publications
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Yamagata-Lynch, Lisa C., Jaewoo Do, Deepa Deshpande, Anne L. Skutnik, Brenda K. Murphy & Erin Garty
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