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Narrative habitus: Thinking through structure/agency in the narratives of offenders

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journal contribution
posted on 2016-07-27, 14:31 authored by Jennifer S. Fleetwood
Starting from the premise that experience is narratively constituted and actions are oriented through the self as the protagonist in an evolving story, narrative criminology investigates how narratives motivate and sustain offending. Reviewing narrative criminological research, this article contends that narrative criminology tends towards a problematic dualism of structure and agency, locating agency in individual narrative creativity and constraint in structure and/or culture. This article argues for a different conceptualisation of narrative as embodied, learned and generative, drawing on Bourdieu’s notion of habitus. Social action, which here includes storytelling, is structured via the habitus, which generates but does not determine social action. This theorisation understands structures and representations as existing in duality, according a more powerful role to storytelling. The article concludes by discussion of the implications of such a shift for narrative interventions towards offending.

History

Citation

Crime, Media, Culture, 2016, 12 (2), pp. 173-192

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, ARTS AND HUMANITIES/Department of Criminology

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Crime

Publisher

SAGE Publications

issn

1741-6590

eissn

1741-6604

Acceptance date

2016-06-01

Copyright date

2016

Available date

2016-07-27

Publisher version

http://cmc.sagepub.com/content/12/2/173

Language

en

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