Toward a social-narrative model of revictimization.

Author(s):  
Steven Jay Lynn ◽  
Judith Pintar ◽  
Rachael Fite ◽  
Karen Ecklund ◽  
Jane Stafford
1988 ◽  
Vol 21 ◽  
pp. 308
Author(s):  
Wendy L. Mitchinson ◽  
Joseph Kestner
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Roy Suddaby ◽  
Trevor Israelsen ◽  
J. Robert Mitchell ◽  
Dominic S.K. Lim

2015 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 92-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ben Whaley

This article examines the Japanese action puzzle game Catherine, arguing that the game presents a social narrative that comments on Japan’s pressing issue of a declining birthrate and aging population. It also theorizes a strategy for player involvement based on “distanced” (self-reflexive and meta) engagement. Through an examination of the narrative, characters, and gameplay, supplemented with national fertility survey data from Japan, the article argues that Catherine subverts classic game tropes and fosters player engagement with a socially relevant diegesis. Simultaneously, the unique meta-gameplay elements utilize what I term “distanced engagement” to encourage the player to critically self-reflect on both the game scenario and their role as a player. In this way, the article considers how the unique relationship between story and distanced engagement allows video games like Catherine to function as impactful and interactive social narratives.


Author(s):  
Jonathan Crowe

The role of implications in Australian constitutional law has long been debated. Jeffrey Goldsworthy has argued in a series of influential publications that legitimate constitutional implications must be derived in some way from authorial intentions. I call this the intentionalist model of constitutional implications. The intentionalist model has yielded a sceptical response to several recent High Court decisions, including the ruling in Roach v Electoral Commissioner that the Constitution enshrines an implied conditional guarantee of universal franchise. This article outlines an alternative way of thinking about constitutional implications, which I call the narrative model. I argue that at least some constitutional implications are best understood as arising from historically extended narratives about the relationship of the constitutional text to wider social practices and institutions. The article begins by discussing the limitations of the intentionalist model. It then considers the role of descriptive and normative implications in both factual and fictional narratives, before applying this analysis to the Australian Constitution. I argue that the narrative model offers a plausible basis for the High Court’s reasoning in Roach v Electoral Commissioner.


INFORMASI ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 125
Author(s):  
Anastasia Yuni Widyaningrum ◽  
Noveina Silviyani Dugis

The reporting of KPK and Polri in is interesting when viewed as a series of films or fictional stories. This research tries to dissect how the narrative model Algirdas Greimas can be used to read the relation of characters that appear in a story like fiction. Using the main report of three Tempo editions selected among the Nine Tempo editions containing KPK and Polri reporting in 2015. Three of nine editions were selected in the middle as the culmination of the story of the entire series of KPK-Polri reporting stories. Using the actan model of Algirdas Greimas, it was found that the parties involved in the KPK-Polri story consisted of many people who, if assembled in actor model relationships, would find a knot that the conclusion of this study was that the KPK was narrated as a weak party, full of problems, and violate ethics so it must be handled and resolved by the Polri. In these three stories, Polri, represented by Bareskrim, is narrated as an institution that protects and controls the violation of the Law. The KPK is then represented as the wrong party for violating the rules, while the POLRI is the right party because it enforces the rules.Pemberitaan KPK dan Polri di majalah Tempo menjadi menarik ketika dilihat sebagai sebuah rangkaian kisah film ataupun kisah fiksi. Maka penelitian ini berusaha untuk membedah bagaimana model narasi Algirdas Greimas dapat digunakan untuk membaca relasi karakter yang muncul dalam sebuah pemberitaan layaknya kisah fiksi. Penelitian ini menggunakan laporan utama tiga edisi Tempo yang dipilih diantara Sembilan edisi Tempo yang memuat pemberitaan KPK Polri pada tahun 2015. Tiga dari sembilan edisi, dipilih tiga edisi di bagian tengah sebagai puncak kisah dari seluruh rangkaian kisah pemberitaan KPK-Polri. Menggunakan model actan dari Algirdas Greimas, didapatkan data bahwa pihak yang terlibat dalam kisah KPK-Polri terdiri dari banyak orang yang saling berelasi. Kesimpulan dari penelitian ini, KPK dinarasikan sebagai pihak lemah, penuh dengan masalah, dan melanggar etika dan hokum sehingga harus ditangani dan diselesaikan oleh Bareskrim Polri. Dalam ketiga kisah ini, POLRI yang diwakili Bareskrim dinarasikan sebagai lembaga yang mengayomi dan melakukan penertiban terhadap pelanggaran Undang-Undang. KPK kemudian direpresentasikan sebagai pihak yang salah karena melanggar aturan, sedangkan POLRI adalah pihak yang benar karena menegakkan aturan.


Author(s):  
Ali Hakimzadeh Ardekani ◽  
Mohammad Hossein Fallah ◽  
Saeed Vaziri ◽  
Abolghasem Asi Mozneb

Introduction: In the Holy Quran, hope and hope for the future have been spoken about many times and in different ways. In general, the study of the concept of hope shows that hope in any case, means waiting to achieve the goal, is accompanied by effort. In recent years, to achieve such a goal, especially in Iran, they use integrated monotheistic therapy. The aim of this study was to design and validate the Quranic-narrative model of hope therapy with an integrated monotheistic treatment approach. Methods: This study is a combined method (qualitative and quantitative) of exploratory type. Statistical sample in qualitative section 48 people were selected by purposive sampling method and in quantitative section 313 people were selected by relative stratified sampling method. The research tool was a semi-structured checklist and interview in the qualitative part and a researcher-made questionnaire in the quantitative part. In the process of research, the literature of hope in the Qur'an and narrations and psychological sources were studied and the indicators of hope and hope therapy were extracted from this literature. Finally, the appropriateness of the indicators with the structures and the structures with the stages of the existing models were measured. Free coding was used to analyze the qualitative part of the information and confirmatory factor analysis was used in the quantitative part of the exploratory factor analysis. Results: The findings indicate the extraction of the Quranic-narrative model of hope therapy in 4 stages, 8 steps, 15 components and 75 items. Stages and components of the model: Step 1) Understanding the meaning and destination of monotheistic hope (expecting something beloved from God / benevolence from God / peace before God / desire for truth - hereafter hope / worldly hope), step 2) Determining the paths of monotheistic hope ( Positive attitude to solving problems / understanding needs and desires / creating monotheistic behavior), stage 3) giving meaning to monotheistic hope (strengthening faith and belief / performing rituals and worship / hope to attract divine mercy and gifts / hope for piety and divine guidance) and Step 4) Integration of monotheistic beliefs and behavior (integration of beliefs and behavior). Conclusion: Considering the appropriateness of hope therapy models and the model presented in this study, it can be said that the current model is effective for the treatment of despair.


2021 ◽  
pp. 154134462110451
Author(s):  
Beth Fisher-Yoshida ◽  
Joan C. Lopez

Narratives, both personal and social, guide how we live and how we are acculturated into our social worlds. As we make changes in our lives, our personal stories change and, in turn, have the potential to influence the social narratives of which we are a part. Likewise, when there are changes in the culture and social worlds around us, that social narrative changes, thereby affecting our personal narratives. In other words, personal and social narratives are strongly linked and mutually influence each other. We may feel and know these transformations take place and understand the ways in which our lives are affected. However, we often struggle to document these shifts. This article suggests using the practical theory, Coordinated Management of Meaning (CMM) (Pearce, 2007), for narrative analysis to identify and surface personal and social narrative transformations.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Kamila Wysłucha

Abstract The article argues that the famous story about the strike, exile and return of the Roman aulos players, which is recorded in the sixth book of Ovid's Fasti and referred to by other Latin and Greek sources, is based on a narrative model that already existed in Greece in the Archaic period. The study draws parallels between the tale of the pipers and the myth of the return of Hephaestus to Olympus, suggesting that, apart from similar plots, the two stories share many motifs, such as references to themes derived from comedy and satyr drama. Searching for a possible channel of transmission of the story from Archaic Greece to Augustan Rome, the study explores the presence of satyric motifs in Etruscan vase-painting and Roman processional rites. It is furthermore emphasized that many of these motifs, which also appeared in lost satyr-plays, are echoed in Augustan poetry.


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