Perrine's Story And Structure Pdf Download
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The current study investigated the role of the narrative genre in the context of three types of personal experience: (a) narrative utterances uttered by a fictional Helen Chapman in Janet Malcolm's Press Start to Kill (Penguin Books, 1990) which employed the paranormal as an ancillary focus, (b) autobiographical recollections of such utterances by an actual person, Janet Malcolm herself, and (c) the same recollections by her daughter, the magician David J. Cohen. Our hypothesis was that adult readers differ in making similar or dissimilar genre connections with stories about a certain type of experience that have been narrated by a character, or about a certain type of character. Reader responses were in keeping with this hypothesis: readers who linked the Helen Chapman narrative to other episodic and ironic narratives tended to make stronger linkages with the Malcolm narrator, and unreliable sources. However, readers who linked the Helen narrative to autobiographical events and to a character drawn from their own lives tended to make stronger connections with the Malcolm narrator and her own memories. 7211a4ac4a