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In this special issue, contributors argue that narrative studies can challenge the late capitalist storytelling industry to direct instrumental storytelling toward more ethically and rhetorically sustainable directions. Given this, the authors suggest, narrative studies should take a more prominent role in contemporary discourses of the storytelling boom. Seeking to redefine the role of narrative theorists and analysts in that boom, the authors address its critically different aspects while also showing how narrative studies can be made compelling, engaging, and societally relevant.
Maria MÄkelÄ is a Senior Research Fellow in the Faculty of Social Sciences at Tampere University.Hanna Meretoja is a Professor of Literary Studies, Creative Writing, and Comparative Literature at The University of Turku.
Mari Hatavara, Matti Hyvärinen, Maria Mäkelä, Frans Mäyrä, Finland) Hatavara, Mari (University of Tampere, Finland) Hyvarinen, Matti (University of Tampere, Finland) Makela, Maria (University of Tampere, Finland) Mayra, Frans (University of Tampere
Mark P. Freeman, Hanna Meretoja, College of the Holy Cross) Freeman, Mark P. (Distinguished Professor of Ethics and Society, Distinguished Professor of Ethics and Society, Department of Psychology, University of Turku) Meretoja, Hanna (Professor, Literary Studies and Creative Writing, Professor, Literary Studies and Creative Writing, Mark P Freeman
Mari Hatavara, Matti Hyvärinen, Maria Mäkelä, Frans Mäyrä, Finland) Hatavara, Mari (University of Tampere, Finland) Hyvarinen, Matti (University of Tampere, Finland) Makela, Maria (University of Tampere, Finland) Mayra, Frans (University of Tampere