AlemánM. W.HelfrichK. W. (2010). Inheriting the narratives of dementia: A collaborative tale of daughter and mother. Journal of Family Communication, 10, 7-23. doi:10.1080/15267430903385784
2.
AndrewsM. (2014). Narrative imagination and everyday life. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
3.
CharonR. (2006). Narrative medicine: Honoring the stories of illness. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
4.
DeweyJ. (1980). Art as experience. New York, NY: Penguin Group. (Original work published 1934)
5.
FrankA. W. (2013). The wounded storyteller: Body, illness, and ethics (2nd ed.). Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago Press.
6.
GoodallH. L.Jr. (2008). Writing qualitative inquiry: Self, stories, and academic life. Walnut Creek, CA: Left Coast Press.
7.
HarterL. M. (2009). Narratives as dialogic, contested, and aesthetic accomplishments. Journal of Applied Communication Research, 37, 140-150. doi:10.1080/00909880902792255
8.
HarterL. M. (2013). The work of art. Qualitative Communication Research, 2, 326-336. doi:10.1525/qcr.2013.2.3.326
9.
HarterL. M.LeemanM.NoranderS.YoungS.RawlinsW. K. (2008). The intermingling of aesthetic and instrumental rationalities in a collaborative art studio for individuals with developmental disabilities. Management Communication Quarterly, 21, 423-453. doi:10.1177/0893318907313711
10.
HarterL. M.NoranderS.QuinlanM. M. (2007). Imaginative renderings in the service of renewal and reconstruction. Management Communication Quarterly, 21, 105-117.
11.
HarterL. M.PattersonS.Gerbensky-KerberA. (2010). Narrating “new normals” in health care contexts. Management Communication Quarterly, 24, 465-473. doi:10.1177/0893318910370271
12.
HarterL. M.QuinlanM.RuhlS. (2013). The storytelling capacities of arts programming in healthcare contexts. In HarterL. M. & Associates (Eds.), Imagining new normals: A narrative framework for health communication (pp. 29-50). Dubuque, IA: Kendall Hunt.
13.
HarterL. M.RawlinsW. K. (2011). The worlding of possibilities in a collaborative art studio: Organizing embodied differences with aesthetic and dialogic sensibilities. In MumbyD. K. (Ed.), Reframing difference in organizational studies: Research, pedagogy, practice (pp. 267-289). Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE.
14.
HarterL. M.ScottJ.NovakD.LeemanM.MorrisJ. (2006). Freedom through flight: Performing a counter-narrative of disability. Journal of Applied Communication Research, 34, 3-29. doi:10.1080/00909880500420192
15.
HarterL. M.ShawE. (Producers). (2014). A beautiful remedy. Athens, OH: WOUB Center for Public Media.
16.
HarterL. M.ShawE.QuinlanM. (Producers). (2015). Creative abundance. Athens, OH: WOUB Center for Public Media.
17.
McNiffS. (2004). Art heals: How creativity cures the soul. Boston, MA: Shambhala Publications.
18.
PangbornS. M. (2016). Creating possible . . . Aesthetically engaging life amid reminders of mortality. Health Communication. Advance online publication. doi:10.1080/10410236.2016.1196519
19.
QuinlanM. (2010). Fostering connections among diverse individuals through multi-sensorial storytelling. Health Communication, 25, 91-93. doi:10.1080/10410230903474035
20.
QuinlanM.HarterL. M. (2010). Meaning in motion: The embodied poetics of Dancing Wheels. Text and Performance Quarterly, 30, 374-395. doi:10.1080/10462937.2010.510911
21.
RicoeurP. (1984). Time and narrative (McLaughlinK.PeelauerD., Trans.). Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago Press.
22.
SharfB. F. (2009). Observations from the outside in: Narratives of illness, healing, and mortality in everyday life. Journal of Applied Communication Research, 37, 132-139. doi:10.1080/00909880902792297
23.
SharfB. F.HarterL. M.YamasakiJ.HaidetP. (2011). Narrative turns epic: Continuing developments in health narrative scholarship. In NussbaumJ.ParrottR.ThompsonT. (Eds.), Handbook of health communication (2nd ed., pp. 36-51). Mahwah, NJ: Routledge.
24.
WillerE. K. (2012). Drawing light(ning) from the clouds of social aggression: A visual narrative analysis of girls’ metaphors. Qualitative Communication Research, 1, 347-383. doi:10.1525/qcr.2012.1.3.347