Anagnorisis and narrative incorporation: How significant incidents affect language-learning behavior Cover Image

Anagnorisis and narrative incorporation: How significant incidents affect language-learning behavior
Anagnorisis and narrative incorporation: How significant incidents affect language-learning behavior

Author(s): Julian Pigott
Subject(s): Foreign languages learning, Applied Linguistics, Philology
Published by: Wojskowe Biuro Historyczne im. gen. broni Kazimierza Sosnkowskiego
Keywords: significant incident; anagnorisis; narrative incorporation; motivation; learning experience

Summary/Abstract: This paper examines how fleeting experiences exert a disproportionately powerful effect on the language learning motivation and behavior of university students. A thematic analysis of interview data is used to show how significant incidents have two principal consequences. The first, anagnorisis, is an immediate, revelatory change in beliefs about language learning. The second, narrative incorporation, is a process through which the memory of the incident and/or its anagnorisis becomes a constituent of self-narratives. It is argued that the significant incident is best understood not as an external influence on motivation, but as a component of the learner’s worldview.

  • Issue Year: IX/2019
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 177-198
  • Page Count: 22
  • Language: English