Max Scheler
Gesellschaft

Repository | Buch | Kapitel

182018

Ethics of storytelling

history, power, otherness

Hanna Meretoja

pp. 177-214

Abstrakt

While in theoretical debates narrativists frequently embrace the view that stories are fundamentally good for us, in narrative fiction the depiction of storytelling as indispensable for human existence is often coupled with the sense that our entanglement in narratives is an ethically complex and ambivalent phenomenon. In this chapter, I discuss the current debate on the ethical significance of narrative for human existence, which too often centres on the dichotomous question of whether it is "good' or "bad' that we interpret our experiences in narrative terms. In this chapter, I problematize this dichotomy by suggesting that narratives can have emancipatory and ethical potential, but they provide no guarantee that identities are ethically sustainable. I shall show how Tournier's novels bring out both the violent and the ethical potential of narrative and throw light on the ethical challenges involved in the construction of narrative identity.

Publication details

Published in:

Meretoja Hanna (2014) The narrative turn in fiction and theory: the crisis and return of storytelling from Robbe-Grillet to tournier. Dordrecht, Springer.

Seiten: 177-214

DOI: 10.1057/9781137401069_7

Referenz:

Meretoja Hanna (2014) Ethics of storytelling: history, power, otherness, In: The narrative turn in fiction and theory, Dordrecht, Springer, 177–214.