TELEVISION

Art of Storytelling: From Parents to Professionals

Series: Art of Storytelling: From Parents to Professionals
5
(2)
Episodes
9
Rating
NR
Year
2012
Language
English

About

Enhance the stories you tell every day in your personal and professional life by learning the tried-and-true methods experienced storytellers use to develop and tell memorable tales.

Related Subjects

Episodes

1 to 3 of 9

1. Telling a Good Story

32m

What qualifies as a story? Learn the significance of storytelling in various cultures; the ways this art is distinct from other forms of performance or literary thought; and how the craft of professional storytelling can help you improve your own storytelling abilities. Listen to tales from the professor's life and get an introduction to the "storytelling triangle."

2. The Storytelling Triangle

31m

Telling a story is a three-way dynamic relationship between you, and the story, and the audience. In the first of three lectures that analyze this storytelling triangle, look at The Old Maid and other stories in depth to understand how the process of storytelling works. Then, consider why you're drawn to certain stories.

3. Connecting with Your Story

37m

What kinds of stories appeal to you most? Look at the variety of stories that are available for you to tell and some practical resources for finding them. Assess the intellectual, social, and cultural connections we develop with stories and identify how you can add depth and context to the stories you tell.

4. Connecting with Your Audience

29m

Focus on this second aspect of the storytelling triangle-your relationship with your audience-by looking at the physical, social, emotional, and intellectual contexts of this relationship and how stories work to bring audiences together. End with an exercise that helps you identify stories that connect with a variety of audiences.

5. Telling Family Stories

31m

Examine the hidden meanings of the family-story genre, including why we tell family stories, how stories organically emerge from families, and what remembering these stories entails. With these hidden meanings in mind, consider how you can tell your own family stories in a way that captures your audience's attention.

6. The Powerful Telling of Fairy Tales

34m

With classic stories, fairy tales, and myths, there's a lot more than "they all lived happily ever after" going on beneath the surface. Use Little Red Riding Hood and other fairy tales to understand the psychology of storytelling and what fairy tales do for children in particular. Then, see why the themes of these tales can be just as appealing to adults.

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