05837nam 2200697 450 991079715030332120230126212920.090-272-6867-3(CKB)3710000000409638(EBL)2040187(SSID)ssj0001482440(PQKBManifestationID)12582473(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001482440(PQKBWorkID)11432243(PQKB)11572644(PQKBManifestationID)16049785(PQKB)24022936(MiAaPQ)EBC2040187(DLC) 2015006120(EXLCZ)99371000000040963820150520h20152015 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrNarrative and identity construction in the Pacific Islands /edited by Farzana Gounder, University of WaikatoAmsterdam, Netherlands ;Philadelphia, Pennsylvania :John Benjamins Publishing Company,2015.©20151 online resource (276 p.)Studies in Narrative (SiN),1568-2706 ;Volume 21Description based upon print version of record.90-272-4934-2 Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index.Narrative and Identity Construction in the Pacific Islands; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; Editor's note; Glossing abbreviations; About the authors; Introduction; References; Part I. Inside the storyworld; 1. Moving through space and (not?) time: North Australian Dreamtime narratives; 1. Dreamtime stories of Australia; 2. Spatial and motion structure in Jaminjung narratives; 3. Travel through time and space: Kriol narratives; 4. Conclusion; Acknowledgements; References2. We've never seen a cyclone like this: Exploring self-concept and narrator characterisation in AulDividuals and individuals in Melanesia; Methods of enquiry; Cyclone Ivy and the Aulua community; Possible strategies for dividualist narrators; Analysis of the narratives; Features of dividual narration; An individualist narration?; Conclusion; References; Part II. Telling narratives, constructing identities; 3. Local ecological knowledge in Mortlockese narrative: Stance, identity, and knowing; Pakin Atoll; Knowledge, identity, and stance; Analysis; Acknowledgements; References; Appendix4. Small stories and associated identity in Neverver1. Introduction; 2. The Neverver speakers; 3. Person reference possibilities in Neverver; 4. Person reference work in small stories; 5. Person reference and identity; References; 5. "Sometime is lies": Narrative and identity in two mixed-origin island languages; Approaching island narratives; Constraints on narratives; Leaving the narratives behind; References; Part III. Narrative memories, cultures and identities; 6. Constructing Kanaka Maoli identity through narrative: A glimpse into native Hawaiian narratives a; 1. Introduction2. Kanaka Maoli identity constructed through mo'olelo and ka'ao3. Establishing Hawaiian literacy; 4. Conclusion; References; 7. 'Stories of long ago' and the forces of modernity in South Pentecost; 1. Introduction; 2. Dun na gol - variation; 3. Chief Telkon Watas' dun na gol; 4. From orality to written text; 5. Variations and values; 6. Concluding comments; Acknowledgements; References; 8. Australian South Sea Islanders' narratives of belonging; Narratives by historians; The islander voice; Political and government narratives; The media narrative; Explaining the slavery narrative; ConclusionReferences9. Avatars of Fiji's Girmit narrative; Indian indenture: Beginnings; Indenture: Social and moral conditions; Post-indenture narrative; Revival of interest in indenture discourse; Indenture narrative beyond servitude; Girmit beyond Fiji; Acknowledgements; References; 10. Samoan narratives: Sociocultural perspectives; Traditional narratives; Telling stories to learn; Contemporary media; Literary writing and recording of stories; Samoan migrant writing; Conclusion; Glossary; References; 11. "[P]ulling tomorrow's sky from [the] kete": Culture-specific narrative representations of re/memStructure, characterisation strategies and character constellationPost-structural and post-modern theories have understood the concept of gender as a "fictitious" element rooted exclusively in a linguistic reality (see Butler, 1990), constituted by an illusory metaphysic of substances. Therefore, for these schools, "there is no gender identity behind the expression of gender" and consequently, gender is exclusively "performatively constituted" (Butler, 1990, 25), mainly as an "effect" of discursive practices. However, if we consider narrative in its wider anthropological sense, we should include not only non-verbal narratives, but also what the anthropology Studies in narrative ;Volume 21.SociolinguisticsPacific AreaNarrative inquiry (Research method)Pacific AreaIdentity (Philosophical concept)Social aspectsIntercultural communicationSocial aspectsIntercultural communicationPacific AreaSociolinguisticsNarrative inquiry (Research method)Identity (Philosophical concept)Social aspects.Intercultural communicationSocial aspects.Intercultural communication306.44099Gounder FarzanaMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910797150303321Narrative and identity construction in the Pacific Islands3853751UNINA