Researching Interpretive Talk Around Literary Narrative Texts: Shared Novel Reading

Researching Interpretive Talk Around Literary Narrative Texts

Shared Novel Reading
 
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Publisher: Routledge
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Short description:

Drawing on a multidisciplinary approach integrating insights from conversation analysis, narrative analysis, and narratology, this book theorizes teaching around narrative prose in each level of education, with a focus on a new framework of Pedagogic Literary Narration.

Long description:
Drawing on a multidisciplinary approach integrating insights from conversation analysis, narrative analysis, and narratology, this book theorizes teaching around narrative prose in each level of education, with a focus on a new framework of Pedagogic Literary Narration which emphasizes the practice of shared novel reading and the importance of the role of the teacher in mediating this practice. // With insights taken from a comprehensive set of transcripts taken from actual classrooms, the volume focuses on the convention in native-tongue literary study in which teachers and students read a novel shared over lessons, combining periods of reading aloud with those of questioning and discussion. In so doing, Gordon seeks to extend existing methodologies from literary and social science research toward informing teaching practice in literary pedagogy and address the need for a theorization of literary pedagogy which considers the interrelationship between text-in-print and text-through-talk. Transcripts are supported with comprehensive analyses to help further explicate the research methodology and provide guidance on implementing it in the classroom. // This book is a valuable resource for scholars in language and education, literary studies, narrative inquiry, and education research.
Table of Contents:

Contents



Chapter 1:


Literary study and shared novel reading in education


1.0 Introduction


1.1 Shared literary reading


1.2 Literary study in education: an overview


1.2.1 Literary pedagogy for supporting students? comprehension of texts


1.2.2 Conceptualisations of reading


1.2.3 The role of classroom talk in reading


1.3 Shared novel reading


1.4 Readers? experiences of shared novel reading in education


1.4.1 Questionnaire design and questions


1.4.2 Survey results


1.4 Summary



Chapter 2:


Researching conversations about literature in schools and universities


2.0 Introduction


2.1 Research in the discipline of literary study: some examples


2.1.1 Practical Criticism as research-informed practice


2.1.2 Louise Rosenblatt: ?Reader Text Poem?


2.1.3 Systematic Functional Linguistics and the verbal arts


2.2 Researching learning conversations


2.3 Researching how voices mediate texts for literary study


2.4 Summary



Chapter 3:


Novels, narratives and narratology


3.0 Introduction


3.1 Key terms


3.1.1 Narrative


3.1.2 Narration


3.1.3 Narratology / narratologies


3.2 The novel as a narrative form: the literary studies perspective


3.3 Novels in education


3.4 Classical narratologies and their use in school English


3.4.1 Propp?s morphology of narrative


3.4.2 Narrative analysis: Labov and Waletzy


3.4.3 Genette and narrative voice


3.4.4 Narrative time: Ricoeur


3.5 New narratologies and their use in researching literary study


3.6 Summary



Chapter 4


Theorising Pedagogic Literary Narration: towards a new narratology of literary study conversations


4.0 Introduction


4.1 Pedagogic Literary Narration


4.1.1 Pedagogic Literary Narration as narration-in-interaction


4.2 Adapting the resources of conversation analysis to literary study contexts


4.3 A three-way view of context for literary study


4.3.1 View 1: institutional contexts for literary study interaction


4.3.2 View 2: Pedagogic Literary Narration as classroom context


4.2.3 View 3: the micro context of Pedagogic Literary Narration in action


4.4 Data sources, settings and participants for this research


4.4.1 Observing shared novel reading in action


4.5 Adapting conversation analysis to Pedagogic Literary Narration


4.6 Reducing and coding conversational literary study data


4.6.1 Stage one: the classroom context of Pedagogic Literary Narration


4.6.2 Stage two: the microcontext of Pedagogic Literary Narration


4.7 An approach to analysing examples of Pedagogic Literary Narration


4.8 Summary


4.8.1 Pedagogic Literary Narration as a classroom context realised in teacher exposition


4.8.2 Towards Pedagogic Literary Narration as micro context: teacher-quoted narration



Chapter 5:


Pedagogic Literary Narration in action


5.0 Introduction


5.1 The focal text: an extract from The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde


5.2 An extract from The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde discussed in the transcript


5.3 Pedagogic Literary Narration as micro context


5.3.1 Narrating, demonstrating and analysing suspense in teacher exposition


5.3.2 Orchestrating narration, review and analysis through talk


5.4 Theorising narratives and narrative analysis for literary pedagogy


5.4.1 Reviewing Pedagogic Literary Narration in the three-way view of literary study


5.4.2 The nature of narration in Pedagogic Literary Narration


5.4.3 Heteroglot teacher exposition


5.4.4 Recognising some limitations of Pedagogic Literary Narration and these research methods


5.5 Summary



Chapter 6:


Spoken quotation in Pedagogic Literary Narration: Introducing QuoTE Analysis


6.0 Introduction


6.0.1 Focal texts: Jekyll and Hyde, and The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas


6.0.2 Examples of spoken quotation in shared novel reading


6.1 Reader positioning around quotations in literary study


6.1.1 Quotation in literary study


6.1.2 Positioning theory for literary pedagogy


6.2 Quotations: From page to talk


6.3 The turn of the page: Study text as participant in literary-critical talk


6.4 The third turn or mini-lecture in classroom interaction


6.5 QuoTE analysis


6.6 Spoken quotation in shared literary reading


6.6.1 Spoken quotation in teacher exposition, senior classroom


6.6.2 Spoken quotation in on-going read-aloud talk, junior classroom


6.7 Spoken quotations in literary-critical talk


6.8 Summary



Chapter 7:


Elaborating characters through conversation


7.0 Introduction


7.1 Elaborating character development together in primary school


7.1.1 Establishing character development as a focus


7.1.2 Accounting for character development together


7.1.3 Indexing a psychological character trait


7.1.4 Elaborating character development together in Pedagogic Literary Narration


7.2 Conceptualising character together in secondary school


7.3 Analysing character through intertexts in higher education


7.3.1 The focal text: Tom Jones by Henry Fielding


7.3.2 Discussing characterisation in Tom Jones


7.4 Summary



Chapter 8:


Discussing literary narratives in higher education: intertextuality and tethering


8.0 Introduction


8.1 A university seminar in a Contemporary Fiction module of literary study


8.2 The focal text: Pond, by Claire-Louise Bennett


8.3 Critical intertexts influencing seminar discussion


8.3.1 An online review of Pond


8.3.2 A published interview with Pond?s author, Claire-Louise Bennet


8.4 Intertextuality, positioning theory and interaction


8.4.1 What is intertextuality?


8.4.2 Positioning theory and intertextuality


8.5 Intertexuality in seminar discussion


8.5.1 Invoking texts and invocations


8.5.2 Call codes: identifying the many voices of intertexts


8.5.3 Lemke?s categories of intertextual relationship


8.6 Discussing ?Pond? together: Conversation analysis


8.6.1 Discussing ?Pond? together: transcript


8.6.2 How do participants enact intertextual literary analysis in conversation?


8.6.3 How are intertextual voices introduced?


8.6.4 How do intertextual voices relate to focal texts and position readers? orientations to them?


8.7 Tethering intertextual talk


8.8 Summary



Chapter 9:


Building themes together: Talk about literary novels in and beyond formal education


9.0 Introduction


9.0.1 Shared reading in an informal book group


9.0.2 Focal text: Life after Life by Kate Atkinson


9.03 Finding an analytic approach suited to informal shared literary reading


9.1 Framing shared literary reading of Life after Life


9.1.0 Participants frame conversation about Life after Life: an informal agenda


9.1.1 Framing book group conversation for analysis


9.2 Life after Life: extended plain text transcripts


9.2.1 Plain transcript 1: representing parallel life stories, and catalyst events


9.2.2 Plain transcript 2: chance and the ?what if? conceit


9.2.3 Plain transcript 3: form and Life after Life as a ?what if? book


9.2.4 Plain transcript 4: Constant Izzie and déj? vu ? ?time is not linear?


9.3 Discussing Life after Life: Conversation analysis


9.3.0 Repetition as a resource in conversation


9.4.0 Annotated transcript 1: maintaining diffuse text topics through repetition - ?in Germany?


9.3.2 Annotated transcript 2: collective text analysis through categorisation statements ? ?the what if scenario?


9.3.3 Annotated transcript 3: considering the novel?s form by proxy - ?difficult to film?


9.3.4 Annotated transcript 4: deictic analysis - ?time is not linear?


9.4 Summary



Chapter 10


Discussing and navigating narrative form: How texts shape talk


10.0 Introduction


10.1 The epistolary form of Daddy Long-legs and genre theory


10.1.1 The epistolary novel


10.1.2 Genre theory


10.2 Positioning theory and short stories


10.3 Short storying to position reading and readers of Daddy Long-legs


10.3.1 Short storying to express and invite reading positions to Daddy Long-legs


10.3.2 Reporting the focal text narrative: short story summaries


10.4 Orienting to analytic reading positions around Daddy Long-legs


10.4.1 Reader positioning arising from focal text form


10.4.2 Reader positioning oriented to focal text as a generic object


10.5 Summary



Chapter 11


Developing Pedagogic Literary Narration for teaching literature


11.0 Introduction


11.1 Literary classroom discourse as pedagogic device


11.1.1 The pedagogic device


11.1.2 Public language


11.1.3 Language codes


11.1.4 The value of ?restricted? shared reading conversations


11.2 Connecting reading group conversations with formal education


11.2.1 Extra-narration in reading groups relative to formal literary education


11.2.2 Paraphrased narrative in reading group conversations


11.2.3 Intertextual text invocation in reading group conversations


11.2.4 ?Talkable texts?: repetition and synecdochic indexing in reading group talk


11.3 Reviewing shared literary reading in formal education


11.3.1 Involvement, narration and positioning


11.3.2 Turn-taking patterns and the collective achievement of literary analysis


11.3.3 Initiate-response-evaluate, teacher exposition and the pedagogic device of


literary study


11.3.4 Spoken quotation: an essential feature of spoken literary discourse?


11.3.5 How and how much texts enter talk


11.4 Summary



Chapter 12:


Interpretive talk around literary narrative texts: an overview


12.0 An overview


12.1 The analytic resources generated by this study


12.2 A narratology for interpretive talk around literary narrative texts


12.2.1 The significance of this narratology for education research


12.2.2 The significance of shared novel reading and Pedagogic Literary Narration for education


12.3 New stories for teachers of literature


12.3.1 Eavesdropping on shared novel reading in teacher education


12.3.2 Teacher-researchers: shared literary reading in a Masters-level programme


12.4 Summary



Tables


Table 4.1 Shared novel reading: observed examples


Table 4.2 Focal class data, The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde


Table 4.3 Teacher exposition, teacher-quoted narrative comprising multi-quotation turns


Table 6.1 Positioning affordances of spoken quotation in literary pedagogy


Table 8.1 Call codes ? voices of human agents


Table 8.2 Call codes - verbal text voices


Table 10.1 Three levels of positioning questions, after Rattansi & Phoenix


Table 12.1 Key terms for researching interpretive talk around literary narrative texts during shared novel reading


Figures


Figure 12.1 A post-classical narratology for interpretive talk around literary narrative texts


Figure 12.2 Shared novel reading: observing other teachers / evaluating your own teaching



References



Appendix