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A ‘Nested Narratives’ Project: theoretical grounding and methodological implications

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  • Charles Kirschbaum

Abstract

Narratives have been conceptualized and approached in a variety of forms in the social sciences, including ‘narrative-as-explanations’ towards ‘narratives-as-ontologies’. At this paper I explore the extent that narratives are central for understanding the ‘projective agency’ and suggest that narratives as ontologies are nested and overlapped with public/institutional narratives. This review offers a set of ‘desiderata’ that are later taken on in order to assess current methodological approaches and analytical procedures, including how the ‘narrative as network’ project might be extended in order to help researchers to formalize nested narratives.

Suggested Citation

  • Charles Kirschbaum, 2013. "A ‘Nested Narratives’ Project: theoretical grounding and methodological implications," Business and Economics Working Papers 187, Unidade de Negocios e Economia, Insper.
  • Handle: RePEc:aap:wpaper:187
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Jan Fuhse & Sophie Mützel, 2011. "Tackling connections, structure, and meaning in networks: quantitative and qualitative methods in sociological network research," Quality & Quantity: International Journal of Methodology, Springer, vol. 45(5), pages 1067-1089, August.
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