Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of contributors
- The remembering self
- 1 Self-narratives: True and false
- 2 Literary and psychological models of the self
- 3 The “remembered” self
- 4 Composing protoselves through improvisation
- 5 Mind, text, and society: Self-memory in social context
- 6 Personal identity and autobiographical recall
- 7 Constructing narrative, emotion, and self in parent–child conversations about the past
- 8 Narrative practices: Their role in socialization and self-construction
- 9 Comments on children's self-narratives
- 10 Is memory self-serving?
- 11 Creative remembering
- 12 The remembered self and the enacted self
- 13 The authenticity and utility of memories
- 14 The remembered self in amnesics
- 15 Perception is to self as memory is to selves
- Name index
- Subject index
4 - Composing protoselves through improvisation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of contributors
- The remembering self
- 1 Self-narratives: True and false
- 2 Literary and psychological models of the self
- 3 The “remembered” self
- 4 Composing protoselves through improvisation
- 5 Mind, text, and society: Self-memory in social context
- 6 Personal identity and autobiographical recall
- 7 Constructing narrative, emotion, and self in parent–child conversations about the past
- 8 Narrative practices: Their role in socialization and self-construction
- 9 Comments on children's self-narratives
- 10 Is memory self-serving?
- 11 Creative remembering
- 12 The remembered self and the enacted self
- 13 The authenticity and utility of memories
- 14 The remembered self in amnesics
- 15 Perception is to self as memory is to selves
- Name index
- Subject index
Summary
This is a theoretical essay about cognitive, emotional, social, and cultural activities that work together to create remembered selves through autobiographical remembering. It is not an essay about an abstraction – The Self. Instead, it is about selves that are grounded in, but emerge through productive remembering and productive interacting in, everyday life (Barclay & Smith, 1992). Such remembered selves are part of our phenomenal experiences of the individual; they are often shared and formed in interpersonal relationships. Remembered selves serve contemporary adaptive purposes, deriving their meaning in the seemingly mundane activities of daily living. What becomes one's remembered self at any particular moment is a gestalt composed and objectified in constructed and reconstructed “personal” and generic memories (Brewer, 1986; Pillemer, 1990). These memories have acquired personal and cultural significance through socially structured activities and transactions between people in face-to-face encounters. On this view, a contemporary remembered self is not a collection of debris haphazardly gathered up from various mental compartments that presumably reflect the compartmentalization of modern life into family, career, or leisure activities. Like Grene (1993), I prefer to think of a remembered self as being inseparable from a “historical self” such that memories are not fleeting fragments of a past more forgotten than remembered, but recollections that are part of a perceived pattern to one's life.
The essay is in four main sections. A theoretical overview is presented first, along with my purpose and position regarding the nature of the remembered self.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Remembering SelfConstruction and Accuracy in the Self-Narrative, pp. 55 - 77Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1994
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