From Appropriation to Dialogic Exploration: A Non-Subsumptive Model of Storytelling




Meretoja Hanna

Meretoja Hanna; Davis Colin

New York & London

2017

Storytelling and Ethics: Literature, Visual Arts and the Power of Narrative

Routledge Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Literature

80

101

121

9781138244061

9781315265018

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.4324/9781315265018



The chapter argues that underlying different ethical
stances towards storytelling is a crucial difference in their conception of
understanding, which can be best understood in terms of the difference between subsumptive
and non-subsumptive conceptions
of (narrative) understanding. While poststructuralist thinkers tend to conceive
of all understanding in terms of a subsumption model that links understanding
to appropriation and assimilation, the tradition of philosophical hermeneutics
explores the possibility of non-subsumptive understanding. The ethical
potential of certain forms of storytelling, she argues, depends on such a
possibility. While subsumptive narrative practices tend to reinforce cultural
stereotypes and explain singular events in terms of general cultural narrative
scripts, non-subsumptive narrative practices tend to question such general
scripts and challenge our categories of appropriation. The chapter develops a
non-subsumptive model of storytelling—and provides a differentiating continuum
for the ethical evaluation of narrative practices—in dialogue with Jeanette
Winterson’s novel Lighthousekeeping,
which shows how storytelling can function in the mode of dialogic exploration.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 19:54