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Conflicting Narrative Identity Formation in Racialized Intercultural Discourse Nadine Gordimer’s The Conservationist – A Cognitive Narratological Approach Cover

Conflicting Narrative Identity Formation in Racialized Intercultural Discourse Nadine Gordimer’s The Conservationist – A Cognitive Narratological Approach

Open Access
|Dec 2016

Abstract

The paper addresses the issue of how racialized intercultural relations can problematize the formation of narrative identity. How it can call in question the narratability of racialized subjectivity and lead to conflicting narrative identites of the same character as inferrible from narratorial discourse, vis-à-vis the way the character views itself in its intramental activity. And how all of this follows from, and is traceable through the manifestations of, racialized cognitive architecture, and thus, paradoxically, unnarratability can become the source of narrativity. The conflicting nature of racialized subjectivity and narrative identity formation will be examined, then, through a socio-cognitive lens. This study will draw on Nadine Gordimer’s apartheid-era novel, The Conservationist (1974) as a tutor text and will be informed especially by colonial/postcolonial theory, cultural as well as cognitive narratology, cognitive cultural studies, theories of intercultural communication, and discourse analysis.

Language: English, German
Page range: 7 - 28
Published on: Dec 28, 2016
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 3 issues per year

© 2016 Zoltán Abádi-Nagy, published by Sapientia Hungarian University of Transylvania
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.