The Co-authored Self : Family Stories and the Construction of Personal Identity Hardback
by Kate C. (Associate Professor, Associate Professor, Western Washington University) McLean
Hardback
Description
Questions about identity are perennially intriguing, and vexing, to scholars and non-scholars alike.
How do we know who we are? How do we define ourselves? How much are we the agents of our own identities, and how much are we defined by others?
In The Co-authored Self, Kate McLean addresses the question of how an individual comes to develop an identity by focusing on the process of interpersonal storytelling, particularly through the stories people hear, co-tell, and share of and with their families.
McLean details how identity development is a collaborative construction between the individual and his or her narrative ecology.
She argues that family stories play a powerful role in defining identities, for better or for worse; it is through these family stories that the self takes on its earliest and most lasting form.
Situating the process of identity development in adolescence and emerging adulthood, she shows through quantitative and qualitative data-with compelling narrative excerpts throughout-the ways in which families both support and constrain identity development by the stories they tell.
Information
-
Item not Available
- Format:Hardback
- Pages:192 pages
- Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
- Publication Date:05/11/2015
- Category:
- ISBN:9780199995745
Information
-
Item not Available
- Format:Hardback
- Pages:192 pages
- Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
- Publication Date:05/11/2015
- Category:
- ISBN:9780199995745