Hey all,


I am in the midst of pulling an all-nighter to revise my ethics proposal for my MA research. I will be interviewing men who have served time in prison for a sex offence about their experiences while incarcerated, so I basically need to outline exactly what I am doing, why, and how it's important.


Anyway, I am doing narrative research, which means that they will essentially be telling me the "story" of their incarceration, so it won't be like a traditional structured interview. To better understand how I am to analyze this data, I took out a few books on narrative analysis.Well, you would never guess what I came across in one of them.


For me, the one movie vomit scene that I really can't sit through is the blueberry pie thing in Stand By Me, which is otherwise one of my favourite movies. Well, a researcher basically chose to analyse the telling of THAT scene to show how characters are constructed, positioned, and made to appear.Usually I'm okay for reading vomit scenes in books, but the fact that it is describing this scene, which I already have a visual of, it just too much for me to handle at 5:38am. Geez, of all places, I would have thought that my boring old research methods books would be devoid of vomit! lol


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SO, this is what I came across in a chapter that is supposed to help me with my own data: I gave fair warning, but just in case anyone is curious....(or wanted some exposure therapy, lol)


"Slowly, a sound started to build in Lardass's stomach. A strange and scary sound like a log truck coming at you at a hundred miles an hour. Suddenly, Lardass opened his mouth. And before Bill TRavis knew it, he was covered with five pies worth of used blueberries. The women in the audience screamed. Boss man Bob Cormier took one look at Bill TRavis and barfed on Principal Wiggins. Principal Wiggins barfed on the lumberjack that was sitting next to him. Mayor Grundy barfed on his wife's tits. But when the smell his the crowd, that's when lardasses plan really started to work. Girlfriends barfed on boyfriends.Kids barfed on their parents. A fat lady barfed in her purse.The Donnelly twins barfed on each other. And the women's auxillary barfed all over the benevolent order of antelopes. And Lardass just sat back and enjoyed what he created. A complete and total barf-o-rama."


EWWWWWWWWW....nothing else can really describe this.


And the analysis: "The rest of the narrative resembles a listing of the same kinds of events performed by a number of different characters on other characters, whereby it is relevant that the chain reaction originated in and through Davie's action; he barfed first and so caused this chain of reactions. The extent and level of detail in which Gordie paints these events displays very nicely what Mechling (1980, 50) calls "a preoccupation with the disgusting" that runs though campfire texts, particularly in the age bracket of young teenagers."


"Positioning with Davie Hogan; Stories, Tellings, and Identities" (Michael Bamberg)


So....essentially that is the sociological examination of the narrative of one of the nastiest film moments in the history of mankind (according to my admittedly biased view!)


*amber*Edited by: crimgoddess