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Developing your narrative competence

Posted by - 3/11/05
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Shawn recently blogged an interesting post on how to develop your narrative competence. The value of a developed sense of narrative competence is well recognised in the Medical field.

Here’s an interesting one for pictorial narratives*.

Do you think the figures below are both narratives?

Calvin and Hobbes

Model Airplane

(*- From “Narrative Representation to Narrative Use: Towards the Limits of Definition – NARRATIVE, Vol. 13, No. 2 (May 2005)”)

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Comments

I was expecting a few comments on this one, so, I might as well make that expectation come true. :)

The answer of whether the two figures are narrative comes down to: 'it depends'.

Most people will have no problems seeing the Calvin and Hobbes figure as a narrative, it is the second one, which reads more like instructions which is challenging. However, it is possible to consider in several thousand years a team of archeologists discovering this picture and 'reading as' as narrative of how an ancient civilization put alot of effort and work into building a special object....

The point I guess is that 'it depends' on what the point of the narrative is for, what is its use.

Regards,
Andrew

Posted by: Andrew Rixon at November 6, 2005 10:44 AM

On the other hand, if you had never seen a cartoon strip before, the Calvin & Hobbes might be mystifying.

Do you go from left to write or write to left? Is this one snapshot in time showing four quadruplets?

Picture systems have a grammar of their own...

Posted by: Matt Moore at November 7, 2005 5:28 PM

 

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