“Why didn’t they get it?” “Did they have to get it?”: What reader response theory has to offer narrative research and pedagogy
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
4-17-2010
Abstract
In this paper we suggest that narrative representations that seemingly fail to reach an audience as intended may engage the audience in more meaningful ways. We use reader response theory to explore how an audience’s responses to a conference narrative presentation made available a multiplicity of interpretive frameworks and narratives to the readers/listeners. We assert that when various interpretive frameworks are made visible across the context of a narrative text by the readers’ or listeners’ responses to it, they can be examined for how they collude, collide, exclude, and compete for meaning. At the same time, conversations evoked by narrative texts and through other arts can generate greater understanding across and through cultural differences. This offers dynamic pedagogical possibilities through appealing to our horticultural approach of seeking out knowledge gained from conversations across divergent interpretive communities. Our point here is that the intentional creation of instances where students are challenged to recognize the taken for granted notions that ground their worldviews through the arts in education and education in the arts affords indispensable opportunities to engage students in a richer type of teaching and learning.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
International Journal of Education and the Arts
First Page
1
Last Page
24
Recommended Citation
Atkinson, B., & Mitchell, R. (2010). “Why didn’t they get it?” “Did they have to get it?”: What reader response theory has to offer narrative research and pedagogy. International Journal of Education and the Arts, 11 (7), 1-24. Retrieved from https://repository.lsu.edu/education_pubs/186