Narrative Identity and the Ethics of Representation in Cross-Cultural Flash Fiction: A Study of “What Remains to Be Seen”
Robert Arrogante | Nadine Morigaki
Discipline: Education
Abstract:
Despite growing scholarly interest in flash fiction, few studies have explored its role in negotiating narrative identity
within intercultural encounters. This gap is particularly evident in relation to marginalized voices. This qualitative
study examined “What Remains to Be Seen,” a flash fiction piece awarded the 2024 Kyoto City Mayoral Prize. The
study examines how identity is constructed, disrupted, and renegotiated during brief encounters between a tourist and
a local man in Kyoto, Japan. The study used a narrative inquiry design. It emphasizes how the story conveys experience
and highlights the relational, dynamic nature of identity. Thematic narrative analysis identified patterns of meaning
related to identity and representation. Close reading guided the analysis, with attention paid to the language, voice,
and structure to generate codes and themes. Iterative cycles of reading, coding, and theme refinement produced four
interrelated themes: (1) the projection of familiar roles and emplotment by the tourist-narrator, (2) the performativity
and emotional burden of “niceness,” (3) narrative rupture reframing homelessness as existential ambiguity, and (4)
transformation and reflexivity in the narrator’s identity. Together, these dynamics show how flash fiction unsettles
cultural scripts, complicates the tourist gaze, and highlights ethical reflection on social invisibility. The study
concludes that minimalist fiction provides a valuable perspective for examining identity negotiation and ethical
representation. Implications include applying Narrative Identity Theory to short fiction and
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