Title | Knowing, experiencing, and reporting: Social memory and participant roles in a Tibetan woman's oral history |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2016 |
Authors | Shannon M.1, smw525@nyu.edu Ward |
Journal | Language & Communication |
Volume | 49 |
Pagination | 19-35 |
ISSN | 02715309 |
Abstract | This article argues for attention to the formation of social memory in interactive contexts, by analyzing a Tibetan oral history interview. In the course of the interview, an English-speaking interviewer and a Tibetan-speaking interviewee communicate through a translator, the interviewee's daughter. By joining analyses of genre, participant roles, the use of the grammatical markings known as evidentiality, ergativity, and egophoricity in Tibetan, and their subsequent translation into English, I look to multiple structures shaping the interactive context. This analysis reveals a generational difference in participants' shaping of narrative, and tensions among participants in the effort to align remembered events with ideologies that construct interviewees as eyewitnesses to political history. |
DOI | 10.1016/j.langcom.2016.04.001 |
Short Title | Knowing, experiencing, and reporting |