Narrative and Identity Construction in the Pacific Islands PDF
Edited by Gounder Farzana Gounder
Part of the Studies in Narrative series
Description
Comprising of more than twenty five percent of the world's known languages, the Pacific is considered to be the most linguistically diverse region in the world.
What unifies the region is the culture of storytelling, which provides a fundamental means for perpetuating cultural knowledge across generations.
The volume brings together linguists, literary theorists, anthropologists and historians to explore the Pacific peoples' constructions of identities through narrative.
Chapters are organized under three themes: fine grained analysis at the storyworld level, the interactional context of narrative telling, and finally, the interconnections between narrative and cultural memory.
The volume reflects the Pacific region's rich linguistic and cultural diversity, with discussions on the narrativization patterns in Australian and New Zealand English, Palmerston Island and Pitkern-Norfl'k English, Fiji Hindi, Hawaiian, Samoan, Solomon Island Pidgin, the Australian Aboriginal languages Jaminjung and Kriol, the Micronesian languages Mortlockese and Guam Chamorros, and the Vanuatuan languages Auluan, Neverver and Sa.
Information
-
Download - Immediately Available
- Format:PDF
- Pages:276 pages
- Publisher:John Benjamins Publishing Company
- Publication Date:20/05/2015
- Category:
- ISBN:9789027268679
Information
-
Download - Immediately Available
- Format:PDF
- Pages:276 pages
- Publisher:John Benjamins Publishing Company
- Publication Date:20/05/2015
- Category:
- ISBN:9789027268679