posted on 2018-01-28, 01:21authored byAiko Oshiro, Agneta Pihl, Louise Peterson, Niklas Pramling
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<p>How children understand the psychology of a story (i.e., the intentions and experiences
of its characters) is pivotal to comprehending its point. In this study we investigate
empirically how 5-year-old children in a Japanese kindergarten manage mental state verbs
and adjectives when collaboratively retelling a tale heard. The tale, an example of a kitsune
trickster story about anthropomorphized foxes interacting with humans, contains a
number of critical events concerning expected and actual discrepancy between
intentions/expectations and outcomes of actions. The empirical data consist of
collaboratively retold stories. These have been recorded and transcribed. Theoretically,
the study is informed by a sociocultural perspective, emphasizing the appropriation of the
intramental function of cultural tools (importantly, in this case, of mental state discourse)
through intermental communication, such as joint storytelling. The findings show how
the children make use of mental state verbs and adjectives denoting psychological
(intellectual and emotional) processes when retelling the story as well as afterwards for
rendering their impressions of the story. </p>
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