Avi

word craft

blog

Finding ourselves in the story

televisioTeach­ers strug­gle to teach young peo­ple to read and write, but they are often strug­gling, I believe, not so much with stu­dents, but a cul­ture which ignores them. A per­son can­not write unless they devel­op a sense of nar­ra­tive about their own lives—a cohe­sive struc­ture which places the indi­vid­ual in a con­text greater than self. 

I think sto­ries pro­vide that frame­work and, indeed, it’s why sto­ries are embed­ded in every cul­ture. Such a sto­ry might be a folk tale, leg­end, mythol­o­gy, or more for­mal lit­er­a­ture.  It might be a reli­gion, a nation­al or even polit­i­cal ide­ol­o­gy. Why so vital? Because sto­ries cre­ate order out of chaos, and give the indi­vid­ual a place in that order. Such sto­ries allow peo­ple to belong.

Now con­sid­er the nar­ra­tive struc­ture in which vast num­ber of our young peo­ple are engaged. I wish I could say read­ing. In fact, it is tele­vi­sion nar­ra­tive and video games that pro­vide nar­ra­tives which—to an over­whelm­ing degree—are nei­ther log­i­cal, nor root­ed in real­i­ty. The young per­son who engages with these nar­ra­tives will not, can­not, find herself/himself in them. Enter­tain­ing, per­haps, but ulti­mate­ly they tell the boy or girl so engaged that their lives are not worth the telling. No won­der so many young peo­ple say, “I have noth­ing to write about.” They have not met them­selves in a story.

2 thoughts on “Finding ourselves in the story”

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Recent Posts