Remembering our past : studies in autobiographical memory

1996; Cambridge University Press; Linguagem: Inglês

Autores

David C. Rubin,

Tópico(s)

Hermeneutics and Narrative Identity

Resumo

Introduction 1. Introduction David C. Rubin Part I. Approaches: 2. What is recollective memory? William F. Brewer 3. Autobiographical knowledge and autobiographical memories Martin A. Conway 4. Autobiographical remembering: narrative constraints on objectified selves Craig R. Barclay Part II. Accuracy: 5. Time in autobiographical memory Steen F. Larsen, Charles P. Thompson and Tina Hansen 6. The pliability of autobiographical memory: misinformation and the false memory problem Robert F. Belli and Elizabeth F. Loftus 7. Autobiographical memory in court Willem A. Wagenaar Part III. Emotions: 8. Perspective, meaning, and remembering John A. Robinson 9. Emotional events and emotions in autobiographical memories Sven-Ake Christianson and Martin A. Safer 10. Depression and the specificity of autobiographical memory J. M. G. Williams Part IV. Social Functions: 11. Remembering as communication: a family recounts its past William Hirst and David Manier 12. Group narrative as the cultural context of autobiography Jerome Bruner and Carol Fleisher Feldman 13. Memories of college: the importance of specific educational episodes David B. Pillemer, Martha L. Picariello, Anneliesa Beebe Law and Jill S. Reichman Part V. Development and Disruption: 14. Remembering, recounting, and reminiscing: the development of autobiographical memory in social context Robyn Fivush, Catherine Haden and Elaine Reese 15. Intersecting meanings of reminiscence in adult development and aging Joseph M. Fitzgerald 16. Schizophrenic delusion and the construction of autobiographical memory Alan D. Baddeley, Andrew Thornton, Siew Eng Chua and Peter McKenna.

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