Asking for Narratives to be Recognized: The Moral of Histories

Authors

  • Silvia Pierosara Macerata University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5195/errs.2011.52

Keywords:

Narrativity, Recognition, History, Morality

Abstract

This paper demonstrates an implicit connection between narrativity and recognition in the work of Paul Ricœur. This view is developed in three steps. First, it shows that the subject who calls for recognition demands that his or her own narrative be recognized. In order to be recognized, a story must be measured with history, particularly that of the victims. Second, from this perspective, the role of collective narratives is fundamental, because they represent the possibility to connect the intrinsic teleology of every human being to the collective attribution of significance. Finally, with the help of a little known essay by Ricœur, the metaphorical power of narrativity to configure meaning will be compared to the power of architecture to construct and to organize space. Both these fields give stories visibility and an ability to be recognized.

 

Author Biography

Silvia Pierosara, Macerata University

Silvia Pierosara holds a doctorate in Philosophy and Theory of Human Sciences from the University of Macerata, Italy. 

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Published

2011-06-29

Issue

Section

Articles