Teaching Narrative
Narrative is everywhere and has unique powers: to enchant and inspire, to make sense of our lives and ourselves and to afford us an enriched understanding of alternative worlds and lives and of better futures - though narrative also has the potential to coerce and oppress. Narrative is at the centre...
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Other Authors: | |
Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Cham :
Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,
2018.
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Edition: | 1st ed. 2018. |
Series: | Teaching the New English
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Full Text via HEAL-Link |
Table of Contents:
- 1. Introduction; Richard Jacobs
- 2. Time, Narrative and Culture; Mark Currie
- 3. Talking Race and Narrative with Undergraduate Students; Sue J. Kim
- 4. The Ethics of Teaching Tragedy; Sean McEvoy
- 5. Teaching Comic Narrative; Rachel Trousdale
- 6. Teaching Crime Narratives: Historicizing Genre and the Politics of Form; Will Norman
- 7.Teaching Historical Fiction: Hilary Mantel and the Protestant Reformation; Mark Eaton
- 8.The Way They Lived Then: Using Wikis to Teach Victorian Novels; Ellen Rosenman
- 9. Digital Humanities in the Teaching of Narrative; Suzanne Keen
- 10.The Work of Narrative in the Age of Digital Interaction: Revolutions in Practice and Pedagogy; Alec Charles
- 11. Empowering Students as Researchers: Autoethnographic Approaches to Teaching and Learning Creative Writing; Jess Moriarty
- 12. Narrative and Narratives: Designing and Delivering a First-year Undergraduate Narrative Module; Richard Jacobs.