Narrative Identity Anchors the Self During Instability: The Structuring Effect of Cinematic Self

Shrija Dirghangi, Alexander E Wong
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

According to narrative identity theory, narratives underlie a strong sense of self because they unify and integrate identity (McAdams, 2008). Consistent with this, individual differences in cinematic self, how storied people experience themselves (Wong, Dirghangi, & Butner, 2020), positively relate to stronger self outcomes. If narratives provide a robust structure for identity, then the consequences of having a stronger or weaker narrative identity may be particularly evident during instability. Two studies tested the hypothesis narrative identity moderates the relationship between self-instability and sense of self. Significant interactions were observed across university students (N  =  172) and online adults (N  =  248), that were consistent across measures of self (self-concept clarity, self-alienation, self-awareness) and stability (stability of self, labile self-esteem), and remained significant controlling for self-esteem. The results support the idea a highly storied identity structures a more robust self than a lesser storied identity and that narrative identity promotes resilience during unstable times.
叙事身份在不稳定中锚定自我:电影自我的结构效应
根据叙事认同理论,叙事是强烈的自我意识的基础,因为它们统一和整合了身份(McAdams, 2008)。与此一致的是,电影自我的个体差异,故事人物如何体验自己(Wong, Dirghangi, & Butner, 2020),与更强的自我结果呈正相关。如果叙事为身份提供了一个强健的结构,那么在不稳定的情况下,拥有更强或更弱的叙事身份的后果可能会特别明显。两项研究验证了叙事认同调节自我不稳定和自我意识之间关系的假设。大学生(N = 172)和网络成人(N = 248)在自我(自我概念清晰、自我异化、自我意识)和稳定性(自我稳定性、不稳定自尊)的测量中观察到显著的交互作用,并且在自尊的控制上保持显著。研究结果支持这样一种观点,即高度传奇化的身份比不那么传奇化的身份更能塑造一个强健的自我,而叙述性的身份能促进在不稳定时期的恢复力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
2.50
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