Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1128667 Poetics 2007 25 Pages PDF
Abstract

Fiercely competing identity narratives provide the foundation for what often appear to be intractable ethnic conflicts. This article considers how an ethnically mixed group from the region of Istria, a site of violence between Italians and Slavs in the first half of the 1900s, has overcome persisting conflict through changes in their original identity narratives. I employ the network representation of life-stories to examine the relations among abstract elements located within the conceptual boundary between the narratives of Italian and Yugoslav Istrians who meet in New York. With their countervailing ties, boundary elements act as bridges to otherwise unconnected narratives. Their bridging ties transform the meaning of boundary elements, while their multiple ties to their original narratives open up opportunities for importing new meaning into existing narrative structures.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities Arts and Humanities (General)