Routledge Handbook Of Counter Narratives 1st Edition by Klarissa Lueg, Marianne Wolff Lundholt – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 042927971X, 9781000198652
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Product details:
ISBN 10: 042927971X
ISBN 13: 9781000198652
Author: Klarissa Lueg, Marianne Wolff Lundholt
Routledge Handbook of Counter-Narratives is a landmark volume providing students, university lecturers, and practitioners with a comprehensive and structured guide to the major topics and trends of research on counter-narratives. The concept of counter-narratives covers resistance and opposition as told and framed by individuals and social groups. Counter-narratives are stories impacting on social settings that stand opposed to (perceived) dominant and powerful master-narratives. In sum, the contributions in this handbook survey how counter-narratives unfold power to shape and change various fields. Fields investigated in this handbook are organizations and professional settings, issues of education, struggles and concepts of identity and belonging, the political field, as well as literature and ideology. The handbook is framed by a comprehensive introduction as well as a summarizing chapter providing an outlook on future research avenues. Its direct and clear appeal will support university learning and prompt both students and researchers to further investigate the arena of narrative research.
Table of contents:
Part I Theoretical discussions and developments
1 Toward a theory of counter-narratives: Narrative contestation, cultural canonicity, and tellability
2 A dialogics of counter-narratives
3 Counter-narratives and counter-stories: The dynamics of dialectical dialogical storytelling
4 A counter-narrative to the accepted ‘Kolding Pyramid 9th Wonder of the World’ narrative with some antenarrative process inquiries
5 Reconsidering counter-narratives
Part II Methodological considerations
6 Applying Foucault’s tool-box to the analysis of counter-narratives
7 Narrative, discourse, and sociology of knowledge: Applying the Sociology of Knowledge Approach to Discourse (SKAD) for analyzing (counter-)narratives
8 Counter-narratives as analytical strategies: Methodological implications
9 Counter-narratives in accounting research: A methodological perspective
10 Board games as a new method for studying troubled family narratives: Framing counter-narratives in social design research
Part III Counter-narratives, organizations and professions
11 The story of us: Counter-narrativizing craft brewery identity
12 Organizational storymaking as narrative-small-story dynamics: A combination of organizational storytelling theory and small story analysis
13 Narratives of recruitment: Constructions of policy, practice and organizational identity in a Danish bank
14 Temporal aspects of counter-narratives and professional identity formation in the establishment of a new hospital department
15 Using counter-narrative to defend a master narrative: Discursive struggles reorganizing the media landscape
Part IV Counter-narratives and education
16 Countering the master-narrative of “good parenting”?: Non-academic parents’ stories about choosing a secondary school for their child
17 Countering the paradox of twice exceptional students: Counter-narratives of parenting children with both high ability and disability
18 The use of counter-narratives in a social work course from a critical race theory perspective
19 Hegemonic university tales: Discussing narrative positioning within the academic field between Humboldtian and managerial governance
Part V Counter-narratives, literature and ideology
20 Amidst narratives and counter-narratives: A traveler’s report
21 Restorying Kenya: The Mau Mau War counter-narratives
22 Australian speculative indigenous fiction as counter-narrative: Post-apocalyptic environments and indigenous ancestral knowledge in Alexis Wright’s The Swan Book
23 Countering prescriptive coherence in narratives of illness: Sarah Manguso’s The Two Kinds of Decay and Maria Gerhardt’s Transfer Window
Part VI Counter-narratives, belonging and identities
24 After Charlottesville: Using counter-narrative to protect a white heritage discourse
25 “The big bang of chaotic masculine disruption”: A critical narrative analysis of the radical masculinity movement’s counter-narrative strategies
26 Othering and belonging in education: Master and counter-narratives of education and ethnicity
27 The functions of master and counter-narratives in biographical interviews: Self-positionings of German-Iranians in relation to discourses on self-optimization and migration
Part VII Counter-narratives and the political sphere
28 Through the cracks in the safety net: Narratives of personal experience countering the welfare system in social media and human interest journalism
29 Understanding food sovereignty: Exploring counter-narrative and Foucault’s genealogy
30 Counter-narratives of EU integration: Insights from a discourse analytical comparison of European referendum debates
31 Between convention and resistance: Counter-narrative strategies in political asylum claims
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Tags: Klarissa Lueg, Marianne Wolff Lundholt, Routledge, Narratives