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Webs narratológicas

23/4/12

Aleluya, por fin he encontrado un blog sobre narración y narratología—"The Storytelling Animal", de Jonathan Gottschall, en Psychology Today. Por cierto que me acabo de encargar su último libro, sobre el mismo tema. Va directo el blog a la cabeza de mi lista sobre webs y blogs narratológicos, que ahora tiene esta forma—al final se encuentra mi propia contribución al género:



PS: A resultas de un comentario que le pongo en el primer post, me recomienda Gottschall este artículo del Atlantic Monthly sobre Facebook: "Is Facebook Making Us Lonely"?  Altamente recomendable.

También le pongo este comentario sobre "Confabulation y Apophenia" en un post sobre autoengaños y creencias delirantes:

I suspect there’s all kinds of interesting reasons why people may give a version of events which is different from that of an observer/analyst... perhaps one of those interesting reasons is that they are in an interactional position different from that of the observer/analyst; their stories are to serve a different practical purpose. Self-delusion is of course a prime mover, alike with the sane and the insane; collective stories which bind people together (religions, etc.) form a kind of continuum with insanity. But I digress. I wanted to ask about the term "apophenia", which is sometimes used in a sense close to the term "confabulation" you use- seeing non-existent connections, paranoid patterns, etc. Do you see any connections between the two, or am I seeing connections myself?

Apophenia / Referential mania



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