The Politics of Storytelling

Violence, Transgression and Intersubjectivity

Michael Jackson

Michael Jackson

Distributed for Museum Tusculanum Press

320 pages | © 2002
Paper $52.00 ISBN: 9788772897370 Published June 2002 Not for sale in the United Kingdom or Europe
Hannah Arendt argued that the "political" is best understood as a power relation between private and public realms, and that storytelling is a vital bridge between these realms - a site where individualised passions and shared views are contested and recombined. In his new book, Michael Jackson explores and expands Arendt's ideas through a cross-cultural analysis of storytelling that includes Kuranko stories from Sierra Leone, Aboriginal stories of the stolen generation, stories recounted before the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission, and stories of refugees, renegades, and war veterans. Focusing on the violent and volatile conditions under which stories are and are not told, and exploring the various ways in which narrative reworkings of reality enable people to symbolically alter subject-object relations, Jackson shows how storytelling may restore to the intersubjective fields of self and other, self and state, self and cosmos, the conditions of viable sociality. The book concludes in a reflexive vein, exploring the interface between public discourse and private experience.
Contents
Acknowledgements
Preface

1. Displacements
The Stories that Shadow Us
'You Never Saw Your Own Faces': Reflections on Privacy and Publicity in the Lives of Refugees
In Extremis: Refugee Stories/Refugee Lives
Displacement, Suffering, and the Critique of Cultural Fundamentalism
2. Returns
Preamble
Retaliation and Reconciliation
From the Tragic to the Comic
Prevented Successions
3. Histories
Preamble
The Social Life of Stories
Storytelling and Critique
The Singular and the Shared

Coda
References
Index
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