cover image: The Self in Action: Narrating Agentic Moments

The Self in Action: Narrating Agentic Moments

1 Sep 2024

This article develops a cultural and contextual approach to studying agency that attends to variation in how people narrate their experiences. Drawing on the large-scale, nationally representative American Voices Project data, the article uses computational methods to test patterns in agentic expression and qualitative methods to examine how respondents narrate agency and passivity as they describe their lives. This analysis captures agentic moments, widespread narratives through which people emphasize their agentic selfhood as they recount specific situations. Moreover, individuals use narrative moves—such as shifting their focus and drawing on subtypes of agency—to craft agentic moments despite constraints. We argue that narratives of agency are variable, situational, and often co-occurring with narrative passivity, which enables people to narrate themselves as agentic even in challenging situations.
agency inequality narratives passivity

Authors

Shira Zilberstein, Elena Ayala-Hurtado, Mari Sanchez, Derek Robey

Related Organizations

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7758/RSF.2024.10.5.05
ISBN
2377-8253 2377-8261
Pages
23
Published in
United States of America
Rights
© 2024 Russell Sage Foundation. Zilberstein, Shira, Elena Ayala-Hurtado, Mari Sanchez, and Derek Robey. 2024. “The Self in Action: Narrating Agentic Moments.” RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences 10(5): 118–40.https://doi.org/10.7758/RSF.2024.10.5.05. We thank Dustin Stoltz, Bart Bonikowski, Jason Robey, Bo Yun Park, Michèle Lamont, Steve Worthington, who provided data science support at the Institute for Quantitative Social Science, Harvard University, and the AVP technical team and editors. Direct correspondence to: Shira Zilberstein, at szilberstein@fas.harvard.edu, 33 Kirkland Street, Cambridge, MA 02138, United States; Elena Ayala-Hurtado, at eayalahurtado@g.harvard.edu; Mari Sanchez, at mjsanchez@g.harvard.edu; Derek Robey, at derekrobey@g.harvard.edu.