Oral Reporting as a Method:Meaning Appropriation,Core Issues,and Optimization Paths
Oral narration,as a narrative form rooted in individual experience,emotion,and memory,plays a pivotal role in the construction of social meaning and the reproduction of culture.By detaching personal experiences and memories from individual histories,oral reporting transforms memory from a simple representational medium into a symbolic reproduction that creates a memory field rich in meaning.This process fosters a deeply humanistic narrative aesthetic,imbuing journalism and communication with profound cultural significance and emotional resonance.Using in-depth interviews for data collection and drawing on Bruner's narrative psychology theory,this study examines the mechanisms of meaning construction,core issues,and pathways for optimizing oral reporting.The goal is to explore both the external manifestations and the intrinsic value of oral reporting,enhancing its quality,appeal,and impact,while providing insights for the development and practice of applied journalism.
oral narrationoral reportingnarrativenarrative psychology theory