Narrative Events

Upcoming Conferences + Seminars + Schools

Filtering by: “Summer Schools”
Project Narrative Summer Institute
Jun
15
to Jun 26

Project Narrative Summer Institute

Contested Issues in Contemporary Narratology:  Theory and Practice

The 2026 institute will focus on a set of issues debated by contemporary narratologists, all of which have important theoretical and practical consequences: authorial intention; social context and narrative form; unreliable narration, fictionality, AI narratives, climate change, and narrative medicine.  We’ll look at how different theoretical conceptions of narrative---rhetorical, intersectional, cognitive, and others—address these issues and pay special attention to the two-way traffic between relevant theory and primary narratives.  A full syllabus will be available shortly.

More details on the Project Narrative website.

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Project Narrative: Narrative as Medicine
Mar
6

Project Narrative: Narrative as Medicine

Narrative as Medicine: When Telling a Story Changes the Body

Project Narrative is hosting a hybrid event with Joshua M. Smyth, Professor, Department of Psychology andOhio Eminent Scholar in Health Psychology.

Narrative theory often views stories as interpretive structures that disclose latent meanings. Expressive writing research invites a complementary, more “biobehavioral” proposition: narrative can be instrumental. That is, a process of self-making that reorganizes emotion, attention, memory, and social connection in ways that measurably shape health. This talk explores the potential for a productive collision between narrative theory and mind–body science: the idea that narrative is not only a lens on experience but a lever that can transform it. Drawing on decades of clinic/laboratory-based expressive writing research and newer forms of guided online journaling, I will examine how narrative articulation (especially shifts in coherence, agency, and meaning) can meaningfully alter stress-related processes, well-being, and functioning. on to the two-way traffic between relevant theory and primary narratives.  A full syllabus will be available shortly.

More details on the Project Narrative website.

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