
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
This episode explores one of the most powerful analytical tools of the "Cognosystemic Theory of Human Psychosocial Relational Construction" (TCCR): the classification of narrative systems that constitute the Cognosystem. This proposal does not aim to produce a rigid taxonomy, but rather a flexible and operational guide to map the complex web of narratives that organize human meaning—from inner experience to macro-level cultural structures.
Why Classify Narrative Systems?
Because narrative does more than explain what we feel, think, or do—it structures psychosocial experience across multiple levels. Classifying it allows us to analyze how meaning is organized, how it is transmitted, and how it can be intentionally transformed. This tool is essential for Social Work, providing a comprehensive framework for deeply understanding individuals, groups, institutions, and cultures.
Three Primary Ecosystemic Levels
The TCCR organizes narrative systems across three major ecosystemic levels:
- Intrapersonal narratives (microsystem): shape identity, self-image, and the sense of self.
- Extrapersonal narratives (meso and exosystem): structure family, group, community, institutional, and media-based relationships.
- Sociocultural narratives (macrosystem): shape the broader symbolic frameworks of culture, power, morality, and tradition.
Types of Narrative Systems by Level
Intrapersonal Narratives:
-Identity-based: structure the self (“I”)
-Self-perceptive and self-evaluative: regulate self-esteem and self-concept
Ideological Narratives:
- Philosophical, political, and religious: construct ethical, power-based, and transcendent frameworks
Chronological Narratives:
- Sequential, prospective, and time-valuative: organize the temporal experience
Interpersonal Narratives:
- Family, group, and community: shape belonging and relational bonds
Organizational Narratives:
- Institutional, economic-commercial, and media-cultural: regulate experience in organized and mass contexts
Sociocultural Narratives:
- Traditionalist, moralist, normativist, legalist: uphold the collective symbolic order
A Narrative Ecology in Motion
The TCCR emphasizes that narrative systems interact in a dynamic network: they influence each other, fuse, contradict, and transform. This narrative plasticity is key to understanding social, subjective, and cultural change processes. Through this classification, we can observe how certain narratives rise, shift, or disappear in response to historical and political contexts.
Practical Applications for Social Work
This tool enables professionals to:
- Analyze narrative frameworks from micro to macro levels.
- Diagnose symbolic structures within individuals, communities, or institutions.
- Design multi-level interventions and strategies for narrative transformation.
- Ground public policies, psychosocial research, and programs in a relational and contextual approach.
The episode concludes with a central affirmation: To understand the classification of narrative systems is to understand how meaning is organized in human experience.
Within the TCCR, this classification serves as a theoretical and methodological compass, linking the personal with the collective, and the individual with the cultural—offering Social Work a robust, situated, and transformative analytical foundation.
Listen and reframe your way of reading the world—through the narratives that hold it together.
Click here to purchase the book on Amazon Books.
This episode explores one of the most powerful analytical tools of the "Cognosystemic Theory of Human Psychosocial Relational Construction" (TCCR): the classification of narrative systems that constitute the Cognosystem. This proposal does not aim to produce a rigid taxonomy, but rather a flexible and operational guide to map the complex web of narratives that organize human meaning—from inner experience to macro-level cultural structures.
Why Classify Narrative Systems?
Because narrative does more than explain what we feel, think, or do—it structures psychosocial experience across multiple levels. Classifying it allows us to analyze how meaning is organized, how it is transmitted, and how it can be intentionally transformed. This tool is essential for Social Work, providing a comprehensive framework for deeply understanding individuals, groups, institutions, and cultures.
Three Primary Ecosystemic Levels
The TCCR organizes narrative systems across three major ecosystemic levels:
- Intrapersonal narratives (microsystem): shape identity, self-image, and the sense of self.
- Extrapersonal narratives (meso and exosystem): structure family, group, community, institutional, and media-based relationships.
- Sociocultural narratives (macrosystem): shape the broader symbolic frameworks of culture, power, morality, and tradition.
Types of Narrative Systems by Level
Intrapersonal Narratives:
-Identity-based: structure the self (“I”)
-Self-perceptive and self-evaluative: regulate self-esteem and self-concept
Ideological Narratives:
- Philosophical, political, and religious: construct ethical, power-based, and transcendent frameworks
Chronological Narratives:
- Sequential, prospective, and time-valuative: organize the temporal experience
Interpersonal Narratives:
- Family, group, and community: shape belonging and relational bonds
Organizational Narratives:
- Institutional, economic-commercial, and media-cultural: regulate experience in organized and mass contexts
Sociocultural Narratives:
- Traditionalist, moralist, normativist, legalist: uphold the collective symbolic order
A Narrative Ecology in Motion
The TCCR emphasizes that narrative systems interact in a dynamic network: they influence each other, fuse, contradict, and transform. This narrative plasticity is key to understanding social, subjective, and cultural change processes. Through this classification, we can observe how certain narratives rise, shift, or disappear in response to historical and political contexts.
Practical Applications for Social Work
This tool enables professionals to:
- Analyze narrative frameworks from micro to macro levels.
- Diagnose symbolic structures within individuals, communities, or institutions.
- Design multi-level interventions and strategies for narrative transformation.
- Ground public policies, psychosocial research, and programs in a relational and contextual approach.
The episode concludes with a central affirmation: To understand the classification of narrative systems is to understand how meaning is organized in human experience.
Within the TCCR, this classification serves as a theoretical and methodological compass, linking the personal with the collective, and the individual with the cultural—offering Social Work a robust, situated, and transformative analytical foundation.
Listen and reframe your way of reading the world—through the narratives that hold it together.
Click here to purchase the book on Amazon Books.