Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

19. Narration

  • Ruth Page
Become an author with De Gruyter Brill
Pragmatics of Social Media
This chapter is in the book Pragmatics of Social Media

Abstract

The analysis of narration in social media contexts exemplifies trends in discourse-analytic approaches to narrative research, which have shifted towards a more flexible view of narrative that takes into account the contexts in which narration takes place. This contextualised view of narration is important, for it takes into account the medium factors (Herring 2007) that shape the various ways in which stories are told in social media sites and platforms. In particular, the multimodal resources present new opportunities and challenges to reconsider how narratives are produced, consumed and recontextualised by a range of tellers and for different purposes.

Abstract

The analysis of narration in social media contexts exemplifies trends in discourse-analytic approaches to narrative research, which have shifted towards a more flexible view of narrative that takes into account the contexts in which narration takes place. This contextualised view of narration is important, for it takes into account the medium factors (Herring 2007) that shape the various ways in which stories are told in social media sites and platforms. In particular, the multimodal resources present new opportunities and challenges to reconsider how narratives are produced, consumed and recontextualised by a range of tellers and for different purposes.

Downloaded on 8.10.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110431070-019/html
Scroll to top button