In this volume, distinguished scholars of narrative provide their early attempts - triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic - to understand "crises" from a narrative perspective. They discuss the narrative notions of crises as an ongoing situation, thereby uncovering ideals of stability and certainty as epistemologically questionable psychological concepts. The authors all start with insight into early considerations, from mid-2020, at a time still without vaccines and variants. They revisit their thoughts over the course of the ongoing pandemic and relate their research perspective to autoethnographic and biographical approaches to "crisis narratives." As scholars and citizens, they share vulnerable moments of uncertainty - what we don't know and will not know - and draw on past collective experiences. What did we learn from the Spanish flu? How well do experts and journalists really understand what those numbers are supposed to signify? How unparalleled is the unprecedented experience for individuals who have experienced war, sieges, and previous pandemics? And finally, will we ever learn to live with the virus?
The chapters shed light on ambiguities relating to us and the other, rational, and irrational approaches to navigating crises, and other ambivalences, without aiming to solve them. They investigate levels of the individual, academic work, and society and highlight stories of the unknown or yet-to-be known by making them accessible through thorough reflection, pushing back the all-too-simplified stories we hear in everyday discourses.
In this volume, distinguished narrative scholars provide their early attempts to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic and to understand "crises" from a narrative perspective. COVID-19 has undoubtedly changed the world. And with this change, it also questioned how we conceptualize "narrative." Rather than attempting to solve the social aspects of the COVID crisis with the power of narrative storytelling, the authors in this volume attempt to re-envision "narrative" as an epistemic subject to be questioned in times of crises.
Chapter 1: Crisis Stories: Narratives of Uncertainty and Change
Irene Strasser and Martin Dege
Part I: End of Story?
Chapter 2: The (Al)lure of Narrative: Information, Misinformation, and
Disinformation in the Time of Coronavirus
Mark Freeman
Chapter 3: Stories of Crisis: Denial, Redemption, and Radical Acceptance in
the Time of COVID-19
Dan P. McAdams
Chapter 4: Dominant and Counteracting Narratives of 'Crisis' in COVID Times
Corinne Squire
Chapter 5: The Pandemic as a Crossroads: Problematizing the Narrative of War
Hanna Meretoja
Chapter 6: Beyond Trauma Narratives: How the Military Siege of Sarajevo
(1992-1995) Shaped Stories Told in the Aftermath
Luka Lucic and Guro Nore Flųgstad
Part II: The Self in Crisis
Chapter 7: Plotless Stories and Unthought Knowns: Aspects of Psychological
Life with COVID-19
Ruthellen Josselson
Chapter 8: Coping Personally and Politically With World Crises: Can It Be
Done Wisely?
Michel Ferrari and Melanie Munroe
Chapter 9: Rethinking Our Lives: COVID-19 and the Narrative Imagination
Molly Andrews
Chapter 10: The Self and Its Crises
Jens Brockmeier
Martin Dege received PhD and MA degrees in Psychology from Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts, and a BA from Freie UniversitƤt Berlin, Germany, and joined Pratt in 2020. In the past, he has worked at the American University of Paris, the University of Potsdam, the University of Konstanz, the University of Hamburg, and Yale University. Martin is the recipient of various research scholarships, including the Marie Curie Program of the EU, the Fritz-Thyssen Foundation, and the German Academic Scholarship Foundation.
Irene Strasser is Assistant Professor at St. Bonaventure University. Her research focuses on lifespan development with an emphasis on care work, adult development and aging. Her work is informed by critical gerontological perspectives, social justice studies, and qualitative approaches, particularly participatory and ethnographic research.