"Shaul Shenhavs Analyzing Social Narratives effortlessly and expertly speaks to multiple audiencesfrom the uninitiated novice, intrigued by the notion of narrative but unsure what it tells us or how to study it, to the experienced narratologist. The book makes signal conceptual contributions, while providing excellent concrete guidance on how to work with narratives, and it illustrates all its points with spare but telling examples. It is sure to become a required starting point among social scientists studying the narratives that shape our lives."Ronald R. Krebs, University of Minnesota
"Whether to found a nation, champion a political party, or rally the people in times of war, narratives serve to bind and to empassion. In this engaging and erudite book, Shaul Shenhav provides social scientists with a versatile set of tools for analyzing the social universe. In probing what it calls the "fractal logic" by which narratives multiply as they diffuse across social networks, this book exemplifies the intriguing possibilities of the narrative science."Raul Lejano, New York University, Co-Author of The Power of Narrative in Environmental Networks
"Shenhavs delivery of the material is masterful. In an efficient 103 pages, this book charts a clear path that climbs the mountains of structuralism, traverses the marshes of post-structuralism, and emerges in the world of social science with feet planted firmly on ground that can be leveraged to inform qualitative, interpretive, and quantitative narrative methodologies ... Narrative scholars within the social sciences should add this book to their shelves and syllabi."Michael D. Jones, Oregon State Universitys School of Public Policy, Review Symposium on Analyzing Social Narratives, European Political Science, 2017
"Shenhav cogently introduces, clearly defines, and lucidly explains in jargonfree language the key concepts of narrative analysis, story, text, and narration. His contribution would have been significant if this was all that his book accomplished. However, Dr Shenhav also introduces a very important original concept multiplicity that facilitates the application of literary narrative concepts to social and political analysis, for example, in the creation of national identities, the determination of how narratives become dominant and how they are challenged."Myron J. Aronoff, Rutgers University, Review Symposium on Analyzing Social Narratives, European Political Science, 2017