Abstract

The article reconsiders Jerome Bruner's famous article "Life as Narrative" (1987), and in particular its thesis about those who "become" the autobiographical narratives they are telling. Galen Strawson's recent criticism of narrativity is used as one perspective to weigh Bruner's thought. Autobiography is, for Bruner, a cognitive achievement, yet he challenges the understanding of narrative as simply following and imitating life. He foregrounds the ways in which life imitates narrative, and the manner in which narrative cognition precedes and organizes experience. However, the key idea about the merger of autobiographical narratives and lived life privileges autobiography vis-à-vis the continuous process of the reception of narratives. Autobiography is never the sole cognitive resource used in organizing experience. The article argues that Bruner's later emphasis on "folk psychological," canonical narrativity and the "breaches" of these expectations as a cause of real narratives marks a change in his thought. The function of narration is to contain, solve, or deal with the "uncanniness" of life and shattered expectations. Experience is thus, to some extent, at odds with the preceding autobiographical narratives, and thus calls for revision of the preceding narratives rather than being dominated by them.

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