2021
DOI: 10.1017/mem.2021.4
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Narrative and gender as mutually constituted meaning-making systems

Abstract: Both gender and narrative are foundational to the ways in which humans engage in meaning-making. Arguing from evolutionary, psychological and feminist theoretical perspectives, we posit that narratives and gender are culturally mediated mutually constituted meaning-making systems: Narratives are defined through gender and gender is defined through narrative. To contextualise this argument, we define ‘narrative’ and ‘gender’ and review the extant literature on how gender is expressed in culturally mediated mast… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Women keep the family history and the family stories across tellings and generations. Although this master narrative evolved across historical time and across cultures (McLean & Syed, 2015), it may be rooted in a deeper evolutionary history, as discussed earlier, in which the division of labor necessary to thrive in social groups was initially determined by reproductive work (Fivush & Grysman, 2022). Thus women, more so than men, became focused on relationships and emotional interactions, aspects of experience necessary for providing and sharing caregiving responsibilities.…”
Section: Maternal and Paternal Reminiscingmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…Women keep the family history and the family stories across tellings and generations. Although this master narrative evolved across historical time and across cultures (McLean & Syed, 2015), it may be rooted in a deeper evolutionary history, as discussed earlier, in which the division of labor necessary to thrive in social groups was initially determined by reproductive work (Fivush & Grysman, 2022). Thus women, more so than men, became focused on relationships and emotional interactions, aspects of experience necessary for providing and sharing caregiving responsibilities.…”
Section: Maternal and Paternal Reminiscingmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…They do not even need last names. They are emblematic of the American story of redemption, although I note in passing that these stories are now about women just as often as they are about men, clearly a change in the American master narrative of gender (Fivush & Grysman, 2022). These stories are everywhere in our shared culture and come to inform how individuals narrate their own personal experiences.…”
Section: Master Narrativesmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…Upon closer inspection, implicit collective memory has in fact already emerged as a key concern of present-day interdisciplinary memory studies – but in a characteristically unexamined way. Jeffrey Olick's (2016, 60) studies on the path-dependence of social memory points in this direction, as does Robyn Fivush and Azriel Grysman's (2022) distinction between explicit and implicit gendered narratives, or Barbie Zelizer's (2022) discussion of framing as part of ‘journalism's backstage’. Implicit collective memory is, in the words of Eviatar Zerubavel (2008, 2015), the ‘elephant in the room’ of memory studies, so far remaining ‘hidden in plain sight’.…”
Section: Perspectives For Memory Studies: Beyond the Street Lampmentioning
confidence: 99%