Drawing on a multidisciplinary approach integrating insights from
conversation analysis, narrative analysis, and narratology, this book
theorizes teaching around narrative prose in each level of education,
with a focus on a new framework of Pedagogic Literary Narration which
emphasizes the practice of shared novel reading and the importance of
the role of the teacher in mediating this practice. // With insights
taken from a comprehensive set of transcripts taken from actual
classrooms, the volume focuses on the convention in native-tongue
literary study in which teachers and students read a novel shared over
lessons, combining periods of reading aloud with those of questioning
and discussion. In so doing, Gordon seeks to extend existing
methodologies from literary and social science research toward informing
teaching practice in literary pedagogy and address the need for a
theorization of literary pedagogy which considers the interrelationship
between text-in-print and text-through-talk. Transcripts are supported
with comprehensive analyses to help further explicate the research
methodology and provide guidance on implementing it in the classroom. //
This book is a valuable resource for scholars in language and education,
literary studies, narrative inquiry, and education research.