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Culture and vision in virtual reality narratives

Nicole Mills, Matthew Courtney, Christopher Dede, Arnaud Dressen, Rus Gant

2020Foreign Language Annals26 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Hansen states that “FL studies must learn to conceive of culture as an open, multi‐voiced and dialogical interaction full of contradictions.” One advocated approach to teach transcultural understanding is through the analysis of cultural narratives. Kearney defines cultural narratives as “the multiple (sometimes competing), conventional storylines that cultural groups produce and use to make sense of and attribute meaning to their shared experiences.” This article will showcase a project in a beginning French course in which four different Parisians from the same quarter were asked to document and share the stories of their lives with a virtual reality (VR) camera. Findings reveal that the VR narratives allowed students to envision, experience, and understand diverse facets of Parisian culture and more vividly imagine their future role as participants in Parisian communities.

Topics & Concepts

NarrativeDialogical selfMeaning (existential)Virtual realityQuarter (Canadian coin)SociologyTarget culturePedagogyPsychologyAestheticsVisual artsSocial psychologyHistoryArtComputer scienceLiteratureHuman–computer interactionPsychotherapistArchaeologyVirtual Reality Applications and ImpactsLanguage, Metaphor, and CognitionVisual and Cognitive Learning Processes
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