The Routledge Companion to Narrative Theory brings together top scholars in the field to explore the significance of narrative to pressing social, cultural and theoretical issues.
Auteur
aul Dawson received a PhD in English from the University of Melbourne. He is currently an Associate Professor in the School of the Arts and Media at the University of New South Wales. He is the author of two monographs: The Return of the Omniscient Narrator: Authorship and Authority in Twenty-First Century Fiction (OSU Press, 2013) and Creative Writing and the New Humanities (Routledge, 2005). He is the winner of the 2010 prize for Best Essay in Narrative, awarded by the International Society for the Study of Narrative, and he was guest-editor for a 2018 special issue of Poetics Today on "Narrative Theory and the History of the Novel" Maria Mäkelä received her PhD in Comparative Literature at Tampere University where she is now a Senior Lecturer and founding director of Narrare: Centre for Interdisciplinary Narrative Studies (2016-2020). In 2018, she was Visiting Professor at the Centre for Fictionality Studies, Aarhus University and in 2019, President of the International Society for the Study of Narrative. She is co-editor of Narrative, Interrupted (De Gruyter, 2012) and Narrative Theory, Literature, and New Media (Routledge, 2015), as well as guest-editor for a 2022 Poetics Today special issue on critical approaches to the storytelling boom. She heads three funded projects dealing with the instrumentalization of narratives.
Contenu
Introduction
Narrative Today: Telling Stories in a Post-Truth World
Paul Dawson (University of New South Wales) and Maria Mäkelä (Tampere University)
Narrative and its Others
Maria Mäkelä (Tampere University) & Samuli Björninen (Tampere University)
Monika Fludernik (University of Freiburg)
Lindsay Holmgren (McGill University)
Madeleine Sorapure (UC Santa Barbara)
Narrative and the Public Sphere
Paul Dawson (University of New South Wales)
Alan Nadel (University of Kentucky)
Francesca Polleta (University of California Irvine)
Narrative and Social Media
Ruth Page (University of Birmingham)
Alex Georgakopoulou (King's College London)
Alex Georgakopoulou (King's College London), Stefan Iversen (Aarhus University), and Carsten Stage (Aarhus University)
Dan Punday (Mississippi State University)
Narrative Truth
Greta Olson (Justus-Liebig-University Giessen)
Irene Kacandes (Dartmouth College)
Marie-Laure Ryan (independent scholar)
Narrative and the Novel
Paul Dawson (University of New South Wales)
Brian McHale (The Ohio State University)
David Ciccoricco (University of Otago)
Biwu Shang (Shanghai Jiao Tong University)
Narrative and Selfhood
Hanna Meretoja (University of Turku)
Julie Rak (University of Alberta)
Alison Gibbons (Sheffield Hallam University)
James Phelan (The Ohio State University)
Narrative and Social Change
Jesse Matz (Kenyon College)
Tanya Serisier (Birbeck, University of London)
Susan Lanser (Brandeis University)
Narrative and Cognition
Richard Walsh (University of York)
H. Porter Abbott (University of California, Santa Babara)
Karin Kukkonen (University of Oslo)
Narrative and Complex Systems
Astrid Ensslin (University of Bergen)
Marina Grishakova (University of Tartu)
Takashi Ogata (Iwate Prefectural University)
Klarissa Lueg (University of Southern Denmark)
Narrative and International Relations
Monika Barthwal-Datta (University of New South Wales), Roxani Krystalli (University of St Andrews), and Laura Shepherd (University of Sydney)
Luis Bouza Garcia (Universidad Autónoma de Madrid) and Carmen Sancho Guinda (Universidad Politécnica de Madrid)
Roy Sommer (University of Wuppertal)
Katja Freistein (University of Duisburg-Essen) and Frank Gadinger (University of Duisburg-Essen)
Narrative and the Environment
Genevieve Lively (University of Bristol)
Marco Caracciolo (Ghent University)
Eric Morel (University of Delaware)