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Relations Between Narrative Coherence, Identity, and Psychological Well‐Being in Emerging Adulthood

Theodore E. A. Waters & Robyn Fivush (2014)

Published
Sep 23, 2014
Journal
Journal of Personality · Vol. 83 · No. 4
DOI
10.1111/jopy.12120

At a GlanceAI

Shows that coherent life stories predict well-being, especially when memories are clearly tied to identity in emerging adults.

SummaryAI

This paper matters because it links how coherently young adults tell important personal memories to key parts of psychological well-being (meaning, self-view, and relationships). Its novelty is showing that the coherence–well-being link is stronger when the narrated event is explicitly relevant to identity, not just when someone is generally a good storyteller. By also using narratives about generic/recurring events, the study suggests that identity-building around unique autobiographical moments is a special pathway connecting narrative coherence to adjustment in emerging adulthood.

Method SnapshotAI

Undergraduates wrote autobiographical and generic event narratives that were coded for narrative coherence and identity content and related to well-being measures.

BackgroundAI

Basic knowledge of narrative identity, autobiographical memory, and psychological well-being research.

And this study confirms the link between coherence and well-being (in the case of a life story). Among the drawbacks — it was conducted on students.

ES

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