2011
DOI: 10.1002/cd.290
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Literary arts and the development of the life story

Abstract: Throughout adolescence, children begin to develop their life story: a coherent account of their experiences and selfhood. Although the nature of this development is still being uncovered, one promising direction for research is the examination of factors that could encourage life story development. Here the authors explore the idea that exposure to the literary arts (i.e., poetry and fictional literature) might promote the formation of a coherent autobiographical narrative. Taking a critical look at both theor… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Habermas and de Silveira [2008] reported a moderate correlation between autobiographical practices and life narrative coherence. Mar, Peskin, and Fong [2011] found no evidence for a link between reading and the development of the life story, not because of evidence to the contrary, but due to a lack of studies. A more direct influence might be exerted by competent life story constructors, especially parents who know their children's lives, but also teachers, who scaffold adolescents' autobiographical reasoning.…”
Section: Future Research On the Development Of The Life Storymentioning
confidence: 84%
“…Habermas and de Silveira [2008] reported a moderate correlation between autobiographical practices and life narrative coherence. Mar, Peskin, and Fong [2011] found no evidence for a link between reading and the development of the life story, not because of evidence to the contrary, but due to a lack of studies. A more direct influence might be exerted by competent life story constructors, especially parents who know their children's lives, but also teachers, who scaffold adolescents' autobiographical reasoning.…”
Section: Future Research On the Development Of The Life Storymentioning
confidence: 84%
“…Overall, they may encompass performing or auditory arts activities -such as drama, dance, singing and other music-based activitiesas well as the less performative but albeit participatory literary artscomprising fictional literature, creative writing, storytelling and oral histories (e.g. Mar et al, 2011) -and visual artsart-viewing and art-making using different mediums or forms such as painting, drawing, sculpture and textiles (e.g. Rose and Lonsdale, 2016).…”
Section: Defining Participatory Arts Activitiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although parent–child talk about real-life narratives (i.e., reminiscing) similarly contributes to this goal (Recchia et al, 2014 ), the narrative fiction context is unique because it illuminates hard life decisions in a highly coherent manner (Mar & Oatley, 2008 ). Therefore, conversations about narrative fiction might represent a privileged context for training of more complex forms of social reasoning (Mar et al, 2011 ).…”
Section: Three Conceptions Of Sociomoral Learning Through Narrative F...mentioning
confidence: 99%