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Definition of narrativize in English: narrativize(British narrativise) verb ˈnarəˌtɪvaɪzˈnerədəˌvīz [with object]Present or interpret (experience, events, etc.) in the form of a narrative. (以故事、叙述的形式)描述,阐释(某物,如经验、理论等) it demystifies and narrativizes any reader's sense of the threat presented Example sentencesExamples - As others have pointed out, narrativizing the event is different from storytelling.
- Through his constant narrativizing, Ambrose constructs a portrait of himself as a fiction and his narratives constitute his selfhood.
- In my opinion this theory, which evidently has been fruitful in many respects, results from a radicalization of the modern subject, who is often reduced to a mere narrativizing subject.
- The senses of dislocation and loss found when we attempt to narrativise history are embodied in the structure of the creative component of my thesis.
- Expectation is a calculus of futurity, an extrapolation of narrativised past events into the future.
- To narrativise these propositions is to help de-familiarise them - to recover something of our naive astonishment at what we had taken for granted.
- She narrativizes violence by contextualizing local acts as part of the common enterprise of decolonization world wide.
- Read self-consciously, historiography opens a possible avenue for reconsidering the social and philosophic codes and semiotics that lie buried in previous attempts to narrativize the past.
- Nevertheless the overdetermining nature of violence means each event is quickly narrativized into the logic of patriots, martyrs or betrayals.
- The prevalent use of siblings and emphasis on sibling relationships in games points to narrativized struggles between traditional and non-traditional social models.
- As such, a constituent element of that subjectivity relies on the struggle to narrativize a life coherently, persuasively, and with expectation of receptive understanding.
- It may be a dirty job, but someone has to narrativise the past.
- In other words, intellectual memory narrativizes its raw material: it selects, edits, and orders material according to culturally recognizable narrative codes.
- Of course, as soon as one communicates memory, whether in speech or in writing, one narrativizes it.
- Writing, here, is an act of narrativizing the self into a single identity.
- As he argues in Chapter 9, even cultural discourses are a resource or tool of the narrativising self.
- Revivalist texts tend to highlight the selective and often contrived aspect of narrativizing history by placing an emphasis on material objects associated with the past.
- What we encounter is not an action in time but an index of temporal action, a scene that we, as viewers, narrativize.
- Instead of subjecting description to action, as do Homer and Virgil in their narrativizing descriptions, Keats defamiliarizes the adjective and lingers on it.
- Indeed, the novel narrativizes the reception of the almanac in such a way as to keep it from being the property of only one nation or imagined community.
Definition of narrativize in US English: narrativize(British narrativise) verbˈnerədəˌvīz [with object]Present or interpret (something such as experience or theory) in the form of a story or narrative. (以故事、叙述的形式)描述,阐释(某物,如经验、理论等) it demystifies and narrativizes any reader's sense of the threat presented Example sentencesExamples - What we encounter is not an action in time but an index of temporal action, a scene that we, as viewers, narrativize.
- The prevalent use of siblings and emphasis on sibling relationships in games points to narrativized struggles between traditional and non-traditional social models.
- As such, a constituent element of that subjectivity relies on the struggle to narrativize a life coherently, persuasively, and with expectation of receptive understanding.
- In my opinion this theory, which evidently has been fruitful in many respects, results from a radicalization of the modern subject, who is often reduced to a mere narrativizing subject.
- It may be a dirty job, but someone has to narrativise the past.
- The senses of dislocation and loss found when we attempt to narrativise history are embodied in the structure of the creative component of my thesis.
- Of course, as soon as one communicates memory, whether in speech or in writing, one narrativizes it.
- Indeed, the novel narrativizes the reception of the almanac in such a way as to keep it from being the property of only one nation or imagined community.
- To narrativise these propositions is to help de-familiarise them - to recover something of our naive astonishment at what we had taken for granted.
- Revivalist texts tend to highlight the selective and often contrived aspect of narrativizing history by placing an emphasis on material objects associated with the past.
- As others have pointed out, narrativizing the event is different from storytelling.
- Through his constant narrativizing, Ambrose constructs a portrait of himself as a fiction and his narratives constitute his selfhood.
- In other words, intellectual memory narrativizes its raw material: it selects, edits, and orders material according to culturally recognizable narrative codes.
- Expectation is a calculus of futurity, an extrapolation of narrativised past events into the future.
- Instead of subjecting description to action, as do Homer and Virgil in their narrativizing descriptions, Keats defamiliarizes the adjective and lingers on it.
- Read self-consciously, historiography opens a possible avenue for reconsidering the social and philosophic codes and semiotics that lie buried in previous attempts to narrativize the past.
- She narrativizes violence by contextualizing local acts as part of the common enterprise of decolonization world wide.
- As he argues in Chapter 9, even cultural discourses are a resource or tool of the narrativising self.
- Nevertheless the overdetermining nature of violence means each event is quickly narrativized into the logic of patriots, martyrs or betrayals.
- Writing, here, is an act of narrativizing the self into a single identity.
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