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Living the Narrative Life
Stories as a Tool for Meaning Making

Gian Pagnucci, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Foreword by Lad Tobin

ISBN 978-0-325-00623-9 / 0-325-00623-7 / 2004 / 192pp / Paperback
Imprint: Heinemann
Availability: In Stock

Grade Level: College

List Price: $22.50
Online Price: $18.00

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Description
    Living the Narrative Life is a defense and an illustration of the power of narrative in the process of learning, narrative as a research tool. Gian Pagnucci's book moves easily between theory and story, and between different kinds of stories, not just classroom stories but stories about a range of experiences. The writing is lovely, clear, unencumbered by academese. Gian is first and foremost a writer, clear and direct and honest, philosophically and politically provocative without being strident or shrill.
    —David Schaafsma, Author of Eating on the Street
    Living the Narrative Life is both aesthetic and political. That is, it aims to explore the artistic potential of narrative and advocate narrative as an alternative way to conduct research. Pagnucci's book should add to the growing interest—at all grade levels—in the problem of genre at the heart of the national debate about how to create "scholarship on teaching and learning."
    —Joseph F. Trimmer, Editor of Narration as Knowledge

Academic paradigms have shifted. There is a growing narrative moment. Despite that, entrenched anti-narrative views continue to make alignment with the narrative camp a troubling prospect. Gian Pagnucci lends support to those who desire to save the story—to use narrative ways of knowing in their teaching and research. He demonstrates how narrative inquiry and analysis are valid and important parts of the English discipline, too much so to be lost to academic politicking.

Creative and engaging, Pagnucci's approach carefully blends story, poem, and theory. By using multiple genres, he adds weight to the argument that essayistic literacy is not the exclusive means by which we can disseminate knowledge. In addition, Pagnucci artfully combines ideas and quotes in two short "Interludes," collages of interpretations of narrative theory and teaching practice. These add further proof to his point that narrative theory builds on a spirit of collaboration, on a real need to exchange stories to make meaning.

Pagnucci pictures a world in which teachers and students leave their assigned roles behind. Instead, they become co-storytellers. When that happens, education becomes more than meaningful—it becomes more enjoyable. And that's the true beginning of living the narrative life.

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