Magic Lantern

Magic Lantern

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

Philosophy of Storytelling

We tell stories in order to learn lessons and to evoke feelings. I think that’s why so many children’s stories are didactic. Because we’d remember the boy who cried wolf longer than we’d remember our parents telling us not to lie about things. When we read books by Dr. Seuss, we remember that a person is a person no matter how small and it sticks with us forever. People write about things that are important to them, and if something is important to you, you’ll want people to remember it. Even in the Harry Potter series, the quotes that stick out to us are ones that have a lesson behind them or make us think a little more. For example:  “We’ve all got both light and dark inside us. What matters is the part we choose to act on. That’s who we really are.” These books contain so many words and phrases that people could choose to quote, but the ones that appear over and over again are the ones that remind us what is important in life and I think that speaks volumes as to what we value in stories and storytelling. Of course, we want to read a good story that keeps us interested and involved, but we also want to gain something morally from it. We love to hate the characters who make bad choices and hurt others and celebrate when something stops them.
            As for evoking emotions, stories have a way of getting us to let our guard down and to become vulnerable. When we listen to or read a story, we allow ourselves to be put into the world of the story. Our minds begin to wander and we imagine the story as we would experience it. Our minds develop images of characters and we can hear their voices in our head when we read what they say. We allow these stories into our minds and past our insecurities. This allows stories to make us feel certain things. When we allow ourselves to be submerged into a story, we become emotionally invested, and when hard subjects are brought up, we don’t have our protective wall up, so we sympathize and feel those emotions purely. We become empathic and relate to the storyteller, and that’s when we are in our moat understanding form.

            I believe storytelling can be both aural, print, and also digital. Obviously storytelling started aurally, then was eventually written down, but now we’ve moved into the digital age of storytelling. The combination of visuals paired with audio portrays stories much more immersive and full than its counterparts. There is so much you can do when telling a story digitally, whether it be adding sound effects or music or even adding symbolic or realistic visuals to pair with it. It strengthens the original story and makes it unique and personal.

1 comment:

  1. First of all, fantastic quote from Harry Potter! I absolutely agree, ‘the quotes that stick out to us are ones that have a lesson behind them or make us think a little more.’ I feel like I always try to find the meaning or purpose behind a story, even if it doesn’t make sense. I guess it helps me relate better. Something I never really thought about before was the point you made that we allow stories past our insecurities and don’t have our protective wall up. I think you’re absolutely right and I think that might be part of the reason as to why we can connect so well with a story.

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