SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  45
Today’s program Part 2 of the series: Part 1: Metaphors Part 2: Stories  Meaning generating devices. Devices that create meaning. We construct realities and identities How stories give meaning to experiences and mediate experience How stories tell us who we are (who we aren’t) and function as the binding glue for social identities
Stories are the essence of humans Telling stories is a human universal of discourse Stories generate meaning. We give our world and personal/social life meaning by narrating experiences through stories Stories are binders, connecters, carriers of culture  Stories or narratives are discursive accounts of factual events or fictional events that take place, have taken place or will take place at a particular time
Stories mediate experience http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h-8PBx7isoM&feature=player_embedded It is easy to relate to the stories of others. Stories paint an experience, they carry images and emotions.
What is your favorite story? Can you recall how the story goes? Can you recall the characters, the main event in the story? What happens in the story? What is the moral of the story? Why do you like this story so much?  And what does this say about yourself?
What is a story? A narrative with a certain specific syntactic shape (e.g. beginning, middle and end or a situation, transformation and a new situation) With a subject matter which allows for or encourages the projection of human values upon this material A story has a structure and this structure is dynamic
What is a story? (2) Narratives can be verbal (spoken or written) Musical Mimed or pictorial E.g. in children's picture book, a painting or a photograph can tell a story (mediate an experience) Take a look at the stories these 3 pictures tells us
What is a story? (3) Narratives sometimes have many voices in a single storytelling event E.g. recounting a family holiday may involve several members presenting their versions of events
Functions of storytelling Among others: Carriers of information Device for self-presentation (who you are) Plain entertainment Connect people, they strengthen in-group ties and position us from others (e.g. history, gossip, ideologies) They provide therapy (healing and connecting to others in order to heal, counseling)  Help with problem-solving Act as tool for socialization (ideologies and moral agency)
Although  narratives vary greatly in their form including their length and function, all verbal  narratives share a basic structure (Labov, 1972) Labov study the structure of oral narratives: ,[object Object]
interview question:“Were you ever in a situation where you were in a serious danger of being killed?”
Structure of narratives/stories (Labov) 	Labov formulated the following structural features of narratives, although it is clear that some narratives don’t display all of the following elements: Abstract (a summary of what is to be said) E.g. ‘my brother put a knife in my head’ Orientation (‘this was just a few days after my father died’)
Structure of narratives/stories (Labov) Complicating action (‘I twisted his arm up behind him…’) Evaluation (‘ain’t that a bitch?’) Result or resolution (‘after all that I gave the dude the cigarette, after all that’) Coda (‘and that was that’)
Communicative power of stories Stories are fundamental to the way we learn and the way we communicate They are the most efficient way of storing, retrieving, and conveying information Because hearing a story requires active participation by the listener, stories are the most profoundly social form of human interaction and communication
Communicative power of stories (2) Stories empower a speaker Stories create an environment Stories bind and bond individuals Stories engage our minds in active listening Stories negotiate differences Stories encode information Stories are tools for thinking Stories bring about healing Stories serve as weapons (persuasion) (carriers of ideologies) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jjYnT105qjc& (the story behind a billboard)
Stories as carriers of ideologies http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sq7XbKd321I Systems of ideas and believes can be manifested and reproduced over and over again in the form of stories Socialization of ideas and the moral agency  Who am I in the  worlds I live in?
Stories are carriers of ideologies
Stories come in many forms thanks to the evolution of media technology Spoken: In the early days of telling stories around the campfire after a day of hunting and gathering, today we do pretty much the same thing at the local bar after work. Written : As language developed, people started writing and delivering letters and writing books by hand to distribute stories to other people. Theater: Storytelling eventually turns into an art form and a new approach of live performance is developed which reaches larger audiences (e.g. Shakespeare) Printing Press: A breakthrough in communication as the ability to efficiently and cost-effectively distribute copies of stories allows everyone to get news and ideas from a newspaper or magazine. (graphic design)
Stories come in many forms thanks to the evolution of media technology (2) Radio: Transmitting news instantly and expanding live performances and the art of storytelling. And let’s not forget what it’s done for the creation and distribution of music. Movies :Live performances being filmed and shown to a wider audience at the same time taking the art form even further as technology in this area alone greatly advances. Part of which is animation which also turns into its own art form. TV: Being able to watch something in the comfort of one’s home, with more choice than ever before of what to watch. Also created a new medium of interactive storytelling, video games. Internet: the Internet is changing communication and storytelling. From easy communication through Email, to everyone being able to publish their ideas with a Blog. It’s like the printing press with limitless possibilities (all the above)
New media give storytelling new life The Future of Storytelling. A few years ago this would have been a scene from a sci-fi movie, The new possibilities that a new medium (here: I-pad) can bring http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1mfm9dwLzdU&feature=player_embedded
Haiku: “The meaning of Life” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uho0Wu4_SH0&feature=player_embedded “She asked me about The meaning of life,  Didn’t Know what to say --- blank ”
Stories shape and reaffirm our identities. Stories reveal who we are and want to be, in other words who and what to identify with
What is the Self?
WHO ARE YOU? WHO AM I? What is the different between these 2 questions? WHO ARE YOU (in the eyes of the other) WHO AM I (in my own eyes) Are these different selves?
Identities are socially produced Identity is a contested concept in terms of definitions and approaches Social and collective approach to the development of an identity (sociological approach to identity) The concept of identity hinges on the paradoxical combination of sameness and difference. Two modes of understanding. People are understood to be simultaneously the same and different.
What is the ‘self’? Describe yourself,  e.g. In terms of ‘I am’ statements What do I stand for? What do I defend? What am I not?
Identities are socially produced (2) Sameness: Latin idem (same): identical: not only are we identical to ourselves (that is, the same being from birth to death) but we are identical with others. We share common identities: as humans, women, men, Aruban, students etc. Difference: The uniqueness of identities: difference from others.  These boundaries makes us unique “ people work with awareness that one’s humanity is simultaneously the same and different (Jackson, 2002: 142).  Within this overarching and apparently capacious category of the human, there are various forms of identity with which people identify. Identity than involves: identification. E.g. In identifying myself with a woman, I’m identifying myself with a wider category, 	‘woman’. But there are some properties of woman that I distance myself from
Multiple identities: identity is dynamic Each individual is seen to have a repertoire of ‘identities’ open to them (social and personal) Each identity informing the individual of who he is and what this identity entails.  Which of these many identities is most salient for an individual at any time will vary according to the social context.
Social Self, Social identity Usually it includes social categories, group you belong to and don’t belong to E.g. Gender, ethnicity, different social group, ideologies you identify with etc. When we belong to a group, we are likely to derive our sense of identity, at least in part, from that group. We also enhance the sense of identity by making comparisons with out-groups. Social identity is different from personal identity, which is derived from personal characteristics and individual relationships.
Approaching Identity through narratives http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IQZwZVBDAHI
Stories convey identity components People feel common ground through stories (‘we share the same story’) Because stories require active listening, people are able to share a depth of experience otherwise not possible through normal chit chat Stories can emphasize shades of meaning and feeling revealing who you are, where you come from and where do you belong
Let’s here some stories about who you are… The stories we tell about ourselves, about our life are rich in meaning Relationship between narratives and identity: You are engaged in processes of producing an identity through assembling various memories, experiences, episodes within a narrative Identities are made up through making a story out of life Identities are being creatively produced through various raw materials available:  MEMORIES, UNDERSTANDINGS, EXPERIENCES and INTERPRETATIONS
‘Emplotment’ Narratives are composed of MEMORIES, UNDERSTANDINGS, EXPERIENCES and INTERPRETATIONS Narratives are composed of 3 main elements: Characters Action Plot The plot is the central feature of narrative:  The plot is what makes the narrative: it brings together different episodes into a meaningful whole Events and episodes are not thrown together at random, but are linked together
Narrator and audience  Both narrator and audience will participate in the processes of linking, this is called emplotment
Emplotment is social embedded There is a shared culture understanding that these events have a place in this narrative Shared symbols E.g. “I grew-up in the working class family’,  “ My father fought for the Status-Aparte, he always dreamed of an other Aruba”  “ I always had to share what I had with my sisters, material stuff were scare in those times” The narrative cannot stand alone but must refer to and draw on wider cultural narratives
Shared meaning, stories are embedded in relationships
Memories are mere interpretations In narrating a story social actors organize events into episodes which make the plot, they do this based on memories Memories are themselves interpretations, they are social products Reconstructions.  That part of the ‘mediation of experience’ that sticks…
Memory is reconstructive “Memory is not like a video record. It does not need images, and images are never enough, moreover our memories shade and patch and combine and delete [the best metaphor (analogy)to remembering is storytelling” (…)“ We constitute our souls by making up our lives, that is, by weaving stories about our past, by what we call memories. The tales we tell of ourselves are not a matter of recording what we have done and how we have felt. They must mesh with the rest of the world and with other peoples stories, at least in externals, but their real role is the creation of a life, a character.” (Hacking, 1995)
Self and other Breaking the line between the self and the other The story of the self, identity: A person enmeshed in and produced within webs of social relationships Life stories must always incorporate the life stories of others They will not be the same, they will always be part of our own but others’ stories must always be part of our own Shared Social framework of meaning: both to interpret, produce our stories and to borrow stories in order to make it our own from a rich source of stories

Contenu connexe

Tendances

Representation and stereotyping
Representation and stereotypingRepresentation and stereotyping
Representation and stereotypingMike Gunn
 
Representation theory
Representation theoryRepresentation theory
Representation theoryAndy Wallis
 
Representation theory hand-out
Representation theory hand-outRepresentation theory hand-out
Representation theory hand-outMedia Studies
 
Media Representation and Audience Theory
Media Representation  and Audience TheoryMedia Representation  and Audience Theory
Media Representation and Audience Theoryelliotdaniela2
 
Collective ID Thursday 28th April
Collective ID Thursday 28th AprilCollective ID Thursday 28th April
Collective ID Thursday 28th AprilBelinda Raji
 
Narrative theory
Narrative theoryNarrative theory
Narrative theoryjwright61
 
Manchester 03 06_2010
Manchester 03 06_2010Manchester 03 06_2010
Manchester 03 06_2010alemika
 
ASY1 Media Studies Representation 3 - Ideology
ASY1 Media Studies Representation 3 - IdeologyASY1 Media Studies Representation 3 - Ideology
ASY1 Media Studies Representation 3 - IdeologyKBucket
 
Media discourse
Media discourseMedia discourse
Media discourse1101989
 
Representation in your chosen media text
Representation in your chosen media textRepresentation in your chosen media text
Representation in your chosen media texthammonda
 
Representation theory in film
Representation theory in filmRepresentation theory in film
Representation theory in filmKayyah_Robun
 
Circuit of Cultural Model by Hall
Circuit of Cultural Model by Hall Circuit of Cultural Model by Hall
Circuit of Cultural Model by Hall Maria Raja Tahir
 
Media Studies theorists key concepts - Revision pack
Media Studies theorists   key concepts - Revision packMedia Studies theorists   key concepts - Revision pack
Media Studies theorists key concepts - Revision packalevelmedia
 
Media theorists revision cards
Media theorists revision cardsMedia theorists revision cards
Media theorists revision cardsMs Olive
 

Tendances (20)

Representation and stereotyping
Representation and stereotypingRepresentation and stereotyping
Representation and stereotyping
 
Representation theory
Representation theoryRepresentation theory
Representation theory
 
Representation theory hand-out
Representation theory hand-outRepresentation theory hand-out
Representation theory hand-out
 
Media texts in the classroom
Media texts in the classroomMedia texts in the classroom
Media texts in the classroom
 
Media Representation and Audience Theory
Media Representation  and Audience TheoryMedia Representation  and Audience Theory
Media Representation and Audience Theory
 
Collective ID Thursday 28th April
Collective ID Thursday 28th AprilCollective ID Thursday 28th April
Collective ID Thursday 28th April
 
Stuart Hall Representation
Stuart Hall Representation Stuart Hall Representation
Stuart Hall Representation
 
Narrative theory
Narrative theoryNarrative theory
Narrative theory
 
Representation power
Representation powerRepresentation power
Representation power
 
Manchester 03 06_2010
Manchester 03 06_2010Manchester 03 06_2010
Manchester 03 06_2010
 
ASY1 Media Studies Representation 3 - Ideology
ASY1 Media Studies Representation 3 - IdeologyASY1 Media Studies Representation 3 - Ideology
ASY1 Media Studies Representation 3 - Ideology
 
SECTION A representation
SECTION A representationSECTION A representation
SECTION A representation
 
Media discourse
Media discourseMedia discourse
Media discourse
 
Representation in your chosen media text
Representation in your chosen media textRepresentation in your chosen media text
Representation in your chosen media text
 
Representation theory in film
Representation theory in filmRepresentation theory in film
Representation theory in film
 
Circuit of Cultural Model by Hall
Circuit of Cultural Model by Hall Circuit of Cultural Model by Hall
Circuit of Cultural Model by Hall
 
KEY CONCEPTS
KEY CONCEPTSKEY CONCEPTS
KEY CONCEPTS
 
Media Studies theorists key concepts - Revision pack
Media Studies theorists   key concepts - Revision packMedia Studies theorists   key concepts - Revision pack
Media Studies theorists key concepts - Revision pack
 
Collectiveidentity intro
Collectiveidentity introCollectiveidentity intro
Collectiveidentity intro
 
Media theorists revision cards
Media theorists revision cardsMedia theorists revision cards
Media theorists revision cards
 

En vedette

Estudio de Oferta Exportadora de la Industria Metalmecánica PYME de Mendoza y...
Estudio de Oferta Exportadora de la Industria Metalmecánica PYME de Mendoza y...Estudio de Oferta Exportadora de la Industria Metalmecánica PYME de Mendoza y...
Estudio de Oferta Exportadora de la Industria Metalmecánica PYME de Mendoza y...ASINMET Mendoza
 
Ovret innovation and implementation in health care
Ovret innovation and implementation in health careOvret innovation and implementation in health care
Ovret innovation and implementation in health care john
 
High Security Zones and the Righ to Return and Restitution in Sri Lanka
High Security Zones and the Righ to Return and Restitution in Sri LankaHigh Security Zones and the Righ to Return and Restitution in Sri Lanka
High Security Zones and the Righ to Return and Restitution in Sri LankaSanda Wijeratne
 
Producto 10 despierta baby
Producto 10 despierta babyProducto 10 despierta baby
Producto 10 despierta babyjose15calderon
 
TESC Presentation Feb 2009
TESC Presentation Feb 2009TESC Presentation Feb 2009
TESC Presentation Feb 2009Nik Panter
 
Bases Portatil Dell
Bases Portatil DellBases Portatil Dell
Bases Portatil Delldiegops
 
20150226_Infoday H2020_Energía_María Luisa Revilla
20150226_Infoday H2020_Energía_María Luisa Revilla20150226_Infoday H2020_Energía_María Luisa Revilla
20150226_Infoday H2020_Energía_María Luisa RevillaRedit
 
Email marketing and Science of Storytelling
Email marketing and Science of StorytellingEmail marketing and Science of Storytelling
Email marketing and Science of StorytellingJuvlon Email Marketing
 
IbO Software de Innovación por Objetivos Empresas
IbO Software de Innovación por Objetivos EmpresasIbO Software de Innovación por Objetivos Empresas
IbO Software de Innovación por Objetivos EmpresasJuanCAC
 

En vedette (20)

Shopping
ShoppingShopping
Shopping
 
Ingenieur_RvS
Ingenieur_RvSIngenieur_RvS
Ingenieur_RvS
 
TEMA 4- Proyecto investigación
TEMA 4- Proyecto investigaciónTEMA 4- Proyecto investigación
TEMA 4- Proyecto investigación
 
Estudio de Oferta Exportadora de la Industria Metalmecánica PYME de Mendoza y...
Estudio de Oferta Exportadora de la Industria Metalmecánica PYME de Mendoza y...Estudio de Oferta Exportadora de la Industria Metalmecánica PYME de Mendoza y...
Estudio de Oferta Exportadora de la Industria Metalmecánica PYME de Mendoza y...
 
Mediamax
MediamaxMediamax
Mediamax
 
News med
News medNews med
News med
 
Asesoria malaga
Asesoria malagaAsesoria malaga
Asesoria malaga
 
Ovret innovation and implementation in health care
Ovret innovation and implementation in health careOvret innovation and implementation in health care
Ovret innovation and implementation in health care
 
CCAFS Strategy for Latin America
CCAFS Strategy for Latin AmericaCCAFS Strategy for Latin America
CCAFS Strategy for Latin America
 
High Security Zones and the Righ to Return and Restitution in Sri Lanka
High Security Zones and the Righ to Return and Restitution in Sri LankaHigh Security Zones and the Righ to Return and Restitution in Sri Lanka
High Security Zones and the Righ to Return and Restitution in Sri Lanka
 
Producto 10 despierta baby
Producto 10 despierta babyProducto 10 despierta baby
Producto 10 despierta baby
 
TESC Presentation Feb 2009
TESC Presentation Feb 2009TESC Presentation Feb 2009
TESC Presentation Feb 2009
 
Bases Portatil Dell
Bases Portatil DellBases Portatil Dell
Bases Portatil Dell
 
20150226_Infoday H2020_Energía_María Luisa Revilla
20150226_Infoday H2020_Energía_María Luisa Revilla20150226_Infoday H2020_Energía_María Luisa Revilla
20150226_Infoday H2020_Energía_María Luisa Revilla
 
Presentación de servicios CORAOPS 2014
Presentación de servicios CORAOPS 2014Presentación de servicios CORAOPS 2014
Presentación de servicios CORAOPS 2014
 
valladolid desde el aire,,,,,,,,espectacular
valladolid desde el aire,,,,,,,,espectacularvalladolid desde el aire,,,,,,,,espectacular
valladolid desde el aire,,,,,,,,espectacular
 
Email marketing and Science of Storytelling
Email marketing and Science of StorytellingEmail marketing and Science of Storytelling
Email marketing and Science of Storytelling
 
IbO Software de Innovación por Objetivos Empresas
IbO Software de Innovación por Objetivos EmpresasIbO Software de Innovación por Objetivos Empresas
IbO Software de Innovación por Objetivos Empresas
 
IRP for Dummies
IRP for DummiesIRP for Dummies
IRP for Dummies
 
Bedeutung von Markenartikeln für Senioren - 3 Fragen an Alexander Wild
Bedeutung von Markenartikeln für Senioren - 3 Fragen an Alexander WildBedeutung von Markenartikeln für Senioren - 3 Fragen an Alexander Wild
Bedeutung von Markenartikeln für Senioren - 3 Fragen an Alexander Wild
 

Similaire à Unit 8. Devices that generate meaning, construct reality and shape identity. Part 2. Storytelling

2.3 - Representation (pre-Avatar).pptx
2.3 - Representation (pre-Avatar).pptx2.3 - Representation (pre-Avatar).pptx
2.3 - Representation (pre-Avatar).pptxJamesDixon10403
 
Collective identity
Collective identityCollective identity
Collective identityHeworthMedia
 
Theory Presentation AS A2
Theory Presentation AS A2Theory Presentation AS A2
Theory Presentation AS A2Kate McCabe
 
A level media representation Mediation and ideology
A level media representation Mediation and ideologyA level media representation Mediation and ideology
A level media representation Mediation and ideologyRafaelPerezOlivan
 
Summary Communication Theory
Summary Communication TheorySummary Communication Theory
Summary Communication TheoryEbony Bates
 
Audience and representation theories
Audience and representation theories Audience and representation theories
Audience and representation theories hanaa_m
 
6.3 - Values shape representation & Social Dilemma.pptx
6.3 - Values shape representation & Social Dilemma.pptx6.3 - Values shape representation & Social Dilemma.pptx
6.3 - Values shape representation & Social Dilemma.pptxJamesDixon10403
 
Semiotics In That 70S Show
Semiotics In That 70S ShowSemiotics In That 70S Show
Semiotics In That 70S ShowOlga Bautista
 
The Difference Between Sociology And Social Anthropology
The Difference Between Sociology And Social AnthropologyThe Difference Between Sociology And Social Anthropology
The Difference Between Sociology And Social AnthropologyNicolle Dammann
 
Unit 4 The blooming of the inquisitive mind: Taking a critical stance
Unit 4 The blooming of the inquisitive mind: Taking a critical stanceUnit 4 The blooming of the inquisitive mind: Taking a critical stance
Unit 4 The blooming of the inquisitive mind: Taking a critical stanceNadia Gabriela Dresscher
 
Theories
TheoriesTheories
Theorieshanaa_m
 
Audience and representation
Audience and representationAudience and representation
Audience and representationhanaa_m
 
Mass communication & media literacy 06
Mass communication & media literacy 06Mass communication & media literacy 06
Mass communication & media literacy 06Clive McGoun
 
Collective identity and gender final
Collective identity and gender finalCollective identity and gender final
Collective identity and gender finaltcasman
 
A level media theory knowledge organiser with exam
A level media theory knowledge organiser with examA level media theory knowledge organiser with exam
A level media theory knowledge organiser with examMrSouthworth
 

Similaire à Unit 8. Devices that generate meaning, construct reality and shape identity. Part 2. Storytelling (20)

MACS 101 - Representation
MACS 101 - RepresentationMACS 101 - Representation
MACS 101 - Representation
 
2.3 - Representation (pre-Avatar).pptx
2.3 - Representation (pre-Avatar).pptx2.3 - Representation (pre-Avatar).pptx
2.3 - Representation (pre-Avatar).pptx
 
Collective identities
Collective identities Collective identities
Collective identities
 
Collective identity
Collective identityCollective identity
Collective identity
 
Theory Presentation AS A2
Theory Presentation AS A2Theory Presentation AS A2
Theory Presentation AS A2
 
Theorist cards.docx
Theorist cards.docxTheorist cards.docx
Theorist cards.docx
 
A level media representation Mediation and ideology
A level media representation Mediation and ideologyA level media representation Mediation and ideology
A level media representation Mediation and ideology
 
Summary Communication Theory
Summary Communication TheorySummary Communication Theory
Summary Communication Theory
 
Audience and representation theories
Audience and representation theories Audience and representation theories
Audience and representation theories
 
6.3 - Values shape representation & Social Dilemma.pptx
6.3 - Values shape representation & Social Dilemma.pptx6.3 - Values shape representation & Social Dilemma.pptx
6.3 - Values shape representation & Social Dilemma.pptx
 
Semiotics In That 70S Show
Semiotics In That 70S ShowSemiotics In That 70S Show
Semiotics In That 70S Show
 
The Difference Between Sociology And Social Anthropology
The Difference Between Sociology And Social AnthropologyThe Difference Between Sociology And Social Anthropology
The Difference Between Sociology And Social Anthropology
 
Mc1 Week 2 09
Mc1 Week 2 09Mc1 Week 2 09
Mc1 Week 2 09
 
Unit 4 The blooming of the inquisitive mind: Taking a critical stance
Unit 4 The blooming of the inquisitive mind: Taking a critical stanceUnit 4 The blooming of the inquisitive mind: Taking a critical stance
Unit 4 The blooming of the inquisitive mind: Taking a critical stance
 
Theories
TheoriesTheories
Theories
 
Audience and representation
Audience and representationAudience and representation
Audience and representation
 
Mass communication & media literacy 06
Mass communication & media literacy 06Mass communication & media literacy 06
Mass communication & media literacy 06
 
Collective identity and gender final
Collective identity and gender finalCollective identity and gender final
Collective identity and gender final
 
A level media theory knowledge organiser with exam
A level media theory knowledge organiser with examA level media theory knowledge organiser with exam
A level media theory knowledge organiser with exam
 
Media And Identity
Media And IdentityMedia And Identity
Media And Identity
 

Plus de Nadia Gabriela Dresscher

Unit 5. The Self, Interaction and Socialization
Unit 5. The Self, Interaction and Socialization Unit 5. The Self, Interaction and Socialization
Unit 5. The Self, Interaction and Socialization Nadia Gabriela Dresscher
 
Unit 4. Sociology in Context: "islandness", the uniqueness of the Caribbean ...
Unit 4. Sociology in Context: "islandness",  the uniqueness of the Caribbean ...Unit 4. Sociology in Context: "islandness",  the uniqueness of the Caribbean ...
Unit 4. Sociology in Context: "islandness", the uniqueness of the Caribbean ...Nadia Gabriela Dresscher
 
Unit 3 changing patterns of society without videos
Unit 3 changing patterns of society without videosUnit 3 changing patterns of society without videos
Unit 3 changing patterns of society without videosNadia Gabriela Dresscher
 
Unit 2. the awakening of the sociological imagination part 2
Unit 2. the awakening of the sociological imagination part 2Unit 2. the awakening of the sociological imagination part 2
Unit 2. the awakening of the sociological imagination part 2Nadia Gabriela Dresscher
 
Unit 1. The Awakening of the Sociological Imagination part 1
Unit 1. The Awakening of the Sociological Imagination part 1Unit 1. The Awakening of the Sociological Imagination part 1
Unit 1. The Awakening of the Sociological Imagination part 1Nadia Gabriela Dresscher
 
Course logistics. Sociology of Development
Course logistics. Sociology of DevelopmentCourse logistics. Sociology of Development
Course logistics. Sociology of DevelopmentNadia Gabriela Dresscher
 
Unit 6. Case study: empirical or interpretative approach
Unit 6. Case study: empirical or interpretative approachUnit 6. Case study: empirical or interpretative approach
Unit 6. Case study: empirical or interpretative approachNadia Gabriela Dresscher
 

Plus de Nadia Gabriela Dresscher (20)

[Mmm mfq]
[Mmm mfq] [Mmm mfq]
[Mmm mfq]
 
Unit 8 structures of inequality
Unit 8 structures of inequality Unit 8 structures of inequality
Unit 8 structures of inequality
 
Unit 7 perspectives on development
Unit 7 perspectives on development Unit 7 perspectives on development
Unit 7 perspectives on development
 
Unit 6 culture and identity
Unit 6 culture and identityUnit 6 culture and identity
Unit 6 culture and identity
 
Unit 5. The Self, Interaction and Socialization
Unit 5. The Self, Interaction and Socialization Unit 5. The Self, Interaction and Socialization
Unit 5. The Self, Interaction and Socialization
 
Unit 4. Sociology in Context: "islandness", the uniqueness of the Caribbean ...
Unit 4. Sociology in Context: "islandness",  the uniqueness of the Caribbean ...Unit 4. Sociology in Context: "islandness",  the uniqueness of the Caribbean ...
Unit 4. Sociology in Context: "islandness", the uniqueness of the Caribbean ...
 
Unit 3 changing patterns of society without videos
Unit 3 changing patterns of society without videosUnit 3 changing patterns of society without videos
Unit 3 changing patterns of society without videos
 
Unit 2. the awakening of the sociological imagination part 2
Unit 2. the awakening of the sociological imagination part 2Unit 2. the awakening of the sociological imagination part 2
Unit 2. the awakening of the sociological imagination part 2
 
Unit 1. The Awakening of the Sociological Imagination part 1
Unit 1. The Awakening of the Sociological Imagination part 1Unit 1. The Awakening of the Sociological Imagination part 1
Unit 1. The Awakening of the Sociological Imagination part 1
 
Course logistics. Sociology of Development
Course logistics. Sociology of DevelopmentCourse logistics. Sociology of Development
Course logistics. Sociology of Development
 
Health as a social problem
Health as a social problemHealth as a social problem
Health as a social problem
 
Poverty as a social problem
Poverty as a social problemPoverty as a social problem
Poverty as a social problem
 
Framing Social Problems 2 & 3
Framing Social Problems 2 & 3Framing Social Problems 2 & 3
Framing Social Problems 2 & 3
 
Framing Social problems 1
Framing Social problems 1Framing Social problems 1
Framing Social problems 1
 
Unit 11
Unit 11Unit 11
Unit 11
 
Unit 10
Unit 10Unit 10
Unit 10
 
Unit 9
Unit 9Unit 9
Unit 9
 
Unit 8
Unit 8Unit 8
Unit 8
 
Unit 7
Unit 7Unit 7
Unit 7
 
Unit 6. Case study: empirical or interpretative approach
Unit 6. Case study: empirical or interpretative approachUnit 6. Case study: empirical or interpretative approach
Unit 6. Case study: empirical or interpretative approach
 

Dernier

Accessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impact
Accessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impactAccessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impact
Accessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impactdawncurless
 
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptxUnit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptxVishalSingh1417
 
Gardella_PRCampaignConclusion Pitch Letter
Gardella_PRCampaignConclusion Pitch LetterGardella_PRCampaignConclusion Pitch Letter
Gardella_PRCampaignConclusion Pitch LetterMateoGardella
 
Seal of Good Local Governance (SGLG) 2024Final.pptx
Seal of Good Local Governance (SGLG) 2024Final.pptxSeal of Good Local Governance (SGLG) 2024Final.pptx
Seal of Good Local Governance (SGLG) 2024Final.pptxnegromaestrong
 
Class 11th Physics NEET formula sheet pdf
Class 11th Physics NEET formula sheet pdfClass 11th Physics NEET formula sheet pdf
Class 11th Physics NEET formula sheet pdfAyushMahapatra5
 
SECOND SEMESTER TOPIC COVERAGE SY 2023-2024 Trends, Networks, and Critical Th...
SECOND SEMESTER TOPIC COVERAGE SY 2023-2024 Trends, Networks, and Critical Th...SECOND SEMESTER TOPIC COVERAGE SY 2023-2024 Trends, Networks, and Critical Th...
SECOND SEMESTER TOPIC COVERAGE SY 2023-2024 Trends, Networks, and Critical Th...KokoStevan
 
Sports & Fitness Value Added Course FY..
Sports & Fitness Value Added Course FY..Sports & Fitness Value Added Course FY..
Sports & Fitness Value Added Course FY..Disha Kariya
 
Making and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdf
Making and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdfMaking and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdf
Making and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdfChris Hunter
 
microwave assisted reaction. General introduction
microwave assisted reaction. General introductionmicrowave assisted reaction. General introduction
microwave assisted reaction. General introductionMaksud Ahmed
 
Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.
Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.
Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.MateoGardella
 
Beyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global Impact
Beyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global ImpactBeyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global Impact
Beyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global ImpactPECB
 
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy Consulting
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy ConsultingGrant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy Consulting
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy ConsultingTechSoup
 
Advanced Views - Calendar View in Odoo 17
Advanced Views - Calendar View in Odoo 17Advanced Views - Calendar View in Odoo 17
Advanced Views - Calendar View in Odoo 17Celine George
 
Presentation by Andreas Schleicher Tackling the School Absenteeism Crisis 30 ...
Presentation by Andreas Schleicher Tackling the School Absenteeism Crisis 30 ...Presentation by Andreas Schleicher Tackling the School Absenteeism Crisis 30 ...
Presentation by Andreas Schleicher Tackling the School Absenteeism Crisis 30 ...EduSkills OECD
 
fourth grading exam for kindergarten in writing
fourth grading exam for kindergarten in writingfourth grading exam for kindergarten in writing
fourth grading exam for kindergarten in writingTeacherCyreneCayanan
 
Z Score,T Score, Percential Rank and Box Plot Graph
Z Score,T Score, Percential Rank and Box Plot GraphZ Score,T Score, Percential Rank and Box Plot Graph
Z Score,T Score, Percential Rank and Box Plot GraphThiyagu K
 
Measures of Dispersion and Variability: Range, QD, AD and SD
Measures of Dispersion and Variability: Range, QD, AD and SDMeasures of Dispersion and Variability: Range, QD, AD and SD
Measures of Dispersion and Variability: Range, QD, AD and SDThiyagu K
 
Unit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptx
Unit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptxUnit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptx
Unit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptxVishalSingh1417
 

Dernier (20)

Accessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impact
Accessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impactAccessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impact
Accessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impact
 
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptxUnit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
 
Gardella_PRCampaignConclusion Pitch Letter
Gardella_PRCampaignConclusion Pitch LetterGardella_PRCampaignConclusion Pitch Letter
Gardella_PRCampaignConclusion Pitch Letter
 
Seal of Good Local Governance (SGLG) 2024Final.pptx
Seal of Good Local Governance (SGLG) 2024Final.pptxSeal of Good Local Governance (SGLG) 2024Final.pptx
Seal of Good Local Governance (SGLG) 2024Final.pptx
 
Class 11th Physics NEET formula sheet pdf
Class 11th Physics NEET formula sheet pdfClass 11th Physics NEET formula sheet pdf
Class 11th Physics NEET formula sheet pdf
 
SECOND SEMESTER TOPIC COVERAGE SY 2023-2024 Trends, Networks, and Critical Th...
SECOND SEMESTER TOPIC COVERAGE SY 2023-2024 Trends, Networks, and Critical Th...SECOND SEMESTER TOPIC COVERAGE SY 2023-2024 Trends, Networks, and Critical Th...
SECOND SEMESTER TOPIC COVERAGE SY 2023-2024 Trends, Networks, and Critical Th...
 
Sports & Fitness Value Added Course FY..
Sports & Fitness Value Added Course FY..Sports & Fitness Value Added Course FY..
Sports & Fitness Value Added Course FY..
 
Making and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdf
Making and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdfMaking and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdf
Making and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdf
 
microwave assisted reaction. General introduction
microwave assisted reaction. General introductionmicrowave assisted reaction. General introduction
microwave assisted reaction. General introduction
 
Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.
Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.
Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.
 
Beyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global Impact
Beyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global ImpactBeyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global Impact
Beyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global Impact
 
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy Consulting
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy ConsultingGrant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy Consulting
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy Consulting
 
Advanced Views - Calendar View in Odoo 17
Advanced Views - Calendar View in Odoo 17Advanced Views - Calendar View in Odoo 17
Advanced Views - Calendar View in Odoo 17
 
Presentation by Andreas Schleicher Tackling the School Absenteeism Crisis 30 ...
Presentation by Andreas Schleicher Tackling the School Absenteeism Crisis 30 ...Presentation by Andreas Schleicher Tackling the School Absenteeism Crisis 30 ...
Presentation by Andreas Schleicher Tackling the School Absenteeism Crisis 30 ...
 
Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: The Basics of Prompt Design"
Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: The Basics of Prompt Design"Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: The Basics of Prompt Design"
Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: The Basics of Prompt Design"
 
fourth grading exam for kindergarten in writing
fourth grading exam for kindergarten in writingfourth grading exam for kindergarten in writing
fourth grading exam for kindergarten in writing
 
Advance Mobile Application Development class 07
Advance Mobile Application Development class 07Advance Mobile Application Development class 07
Advance Mobile Application Development class 07
 
Z Score,T Score, Percential Rank and Box Plot Graph
Z Score,T Score, Percential Rank and Box Plot GraphZ Score,T Score, Percential Rank and Box Plot Graph
Z Score,T Score, Percential Rank and Box Plot Graph
 
Measures of Dispersion and Variability: Range, QD, AD and SD
Measures of Dispersion and Variability: Range, QD, AD and SDMeasures of Dispersion and Variability: Range, QD, AD and SD
Measures of Dispersion and Variability: Range, QD, AD and SD
 
Unit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptx
Unit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptxUnit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptx
Unit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptx
 

Unit 8. Devices that generate meaning, construct reality and shape identity. Part 2. Storytelling

  • 1.
  • 2. Today’s program Part 2 of the series: Part 1: Metaphors Part 2: Stories Meaning generating devices. Devices that create meaning. We construct realities and identities How stories give meaning to experiences and mediate experience How stories tell us who we are (who we aren’t) and function as the binding glue for social identities
  • 3. Stories are the essence of humans Telling stories is a human universal of discourse Stories generate meaning. We give our world and personal/social life meaning by narrating experiences through stories Stories are binders, connecters, carriers of culture Stories or narratives are discursive accounts of factual events or fictional events that take place, have taken place or will take place at a particular time
  • 4. Stories mediate experience http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h-8PBx7isoM&feature=player_embedded It is easy to relate to the stories of others. Stories paint an experience, they carry images and emotions.
  • 5. What is your favorite story? Can you recall how the story goes? Can you recall the characters, the main event in the story? What happens in the story? What is the moral of the story? Why do you like this story so much? And what does this say about yourself?
  • 6. What is a story? A narrative with a certain specific syntactic shape (e.g. beginning, middle and end or a situation, transformation and a new situation) With a subject matter which allows for or encourages the projection of human values upon this material A story has a structure and this structure is dynamic
  • 7. What is a story? (2) Narratives can be verbal (spoken or written) Musical Mimed or pictorial E.g. in children's picture book, a painting or a photograph can tell a story (mediate an experience) Take a look at the stories these 3 pictures tells us
  • 8.
  • 9.
  • 10.
  • 11. What is a story? (3) Narratives sometimes have many voices in a single storytelling event E.g. recounting a family holiday may involve several members presenting their versions of events
  • 12. Functions of storytelling Among others: Carriers of information Device for self-presentation (who you are) Plain entertainment Connect people, they strengthen in-group ties and position us from others (e.g. history, gossip, ideologies) They provide therapy (healing and connecting to others in order to heal, counseling) Help with problem-solving Act as tool for socialization (ideologies and moral agency)
  • 13.
  • 14. interview question:“Were you ever in a situation where you were in a serious danger of being killed?”
  • 15. Structure of narratives/stories (Labov) Labov formulated the following structural features of narratives, although it is clear that some narratives don’t display all of the following elements: Abstract (a summary of what is to be said) E.g. ‘my brother put a knife in my head’ Orientation (‘this was just a few days after my father died’)
  • 16. Structure of narratives/stories (Labov) Complicating action (‘I twisted his arm up behind him…’) Evaluation (‘ain’t that a bitch?’) Result or resolution (‘after all that I gave the dude the cigarette, after all that’) Coda (‘and that was that’)
  • 17. Communicative power of stories Stories are fundamental to the way we learn and the way we communicate They are the most efficient way of storing, retrieving, and conveying information Because hearing a story requires active participation by the listener, stories are the most profoundly social form of human interaction and communication
  • 18. Communicative power of stories (2) Stories empower a speaker Stories create an environment Stories bind and bond individuals Stories engage our minds in active listening Stories negotiate differences Stories encode information Stories are tools for thinking Stories bring about healing Stories serve as weapons (persuasion) (carriers of ideologies) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jjYnT105qjc& (the story behind a billboard)
  • 19.
  • 20.
  • 21. Stories as carriers of ideologies http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sq7XbKd321I Systems of ideas and believes can be manifested and reproduced over and over again in the form of stories Socialization of ideas and the moral agency Who am I in the worlds I live in?
  • 22. Stories are carriers of ideologies
  • 23. Stories come in many forms thanks to the evolution of media technology Spoken: In the early days of telling stories around the campfire after a day of hunting and gathering, today we do pretty much the same thing at the local bar after work. Written : As language developed, people started writing and delivering letters and writing books by hand to distribute stories to other people. Theater: Storytelling eventually turns into an art form and a new approach of live performance is developed which reaches larger audiences (e.g. Shakespeare) Printing Press: A breakthrough in communication as the ability to efficiently and cost-effectively distribute copies of stories allows everyone to get news and ideas from a newspaper or magazine. (graphic design)
  • 24. Stories come in many forms thanks to the evolution of media technology (2) Radio: Transmitting news instantly and expanding live performances and the art of storytelling. And let’s not forget what it’s done for the creation and distribution of music. Movies :Live performances being filmed and shown to a wider audience at the same time taking the art form even further as technology in this area alone greatly advances. Part of which is animation which also turns into its own art form. TV: Being able to watch something in the comfort of one’s home, with more choice than ever before of what to watch. Also created a new medium of interactive storytelling, video games. Internet: the Internet is changing communication and storytelling. From easy communication through Email, to everyone being able to publish their ideas with a Blog. It’s like the printing press with limitless possibilities (all the above)
  • 25. New media give storytelling new life The Future of Storytelling. A few years ago this would have been a scene from a sci-fi movie, The new possibilities that a new medium (here: I-pad) can bring http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1mfm9dwLzdU&feature=player_embedded
  • 26. Haiku: “The meaning of Life” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uho0Wu4_SH0&feature=player_embedded “She asked me about The meaning of life, Didn’t Know what to say --- blank ”
  • 27. Stories shape and reaffirm our identities. Stories reveal who we are and want to be, in other words who and what to identify with
  • 28. What is the Self?
  • 29. WHO ARE YOU? WHO AM I? What is the different between these 2 questions? WHO ARE YOU (in the eyes of the other) WHO AM I (in my own eyes) Are these different selves?
  • 30. Identities are socially produced Identity is a contested concept in terms of definitions and approaches Social and collective approach to the development of an identity (sociological approach to identity) The concept of identity hinges on the paradoxical combination of sameness and difference. Two modes of understanding. People are understood to be simultaneously the same and different.
  • 31. What is the ‘self’? Describe yourself, e.g. In terms of ‘I am’ statements What do I stand for? What do I defend? What am I not?
  • 32. Identities are socially produced (2) Sameness: Latin idem (same): identical: not only are we identical to ourselves (that is, the same being from birth to death) but we are identical with others. We share common identities: as humans, women, men, Aruban, students etc. Difference: The uniqueness of identities: difference from others. These boundaries makes us unique “ people work with awareness that one’s humanity is simultaneously the same and different (Jackson, 2002: 142). Within this overarching and apparently capacious category of the human, there are various forms of identity with which people identify. Identity than involves: identification. E.g. In identifying myself with a woman, I’m identifying myself with a wider category, ‘woman’. But there are some properties of woman that I distance myself from
  • 33. Multiple identities: identity is dynamic Each individual is seen to have a repertoire of ‘identities’ open to them (social and personal) Each identity informing the individual of who he is and what this identity entails. Which of these many identities is most salient for an individual at any time will vary according to the social context.
  • 34. Social Self, Social identity Usually it includes social categories, group you belong to and don’t belong to E.g. Gender, ethnicity, different social group, ideologies you identify with etc. When we belong to a group, we are likely to derive our sense of identity, at least in part, from that group. We also enhance the sense of identity by making comparisons with out-groups. Social identity is different from personal identity, which is derived from personal characteristics and individual relationships.
  • 35. Approaching Identity through narratives http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IQZwZVBDAHI
  • 36. Stories convey identity components People feel common ground through stories (‘we share the same story’) Because stories require active listening, people are able to share a depth of experience otherwise not possible through normal chit chat Stories can emphasize shades of meaning and feeling revealing who you are, where you come from and where do you belong
  • 37. Let’s here some stories about who you are… The stories we tell about ourselves, about our life are rich in meaning Relationship between narratives and identity: You are engaged in processes of producing an identity through assembling various memories, experiences, episodes within a narrative Identities are made up through making a story out of life Identities are being creatively produced through various raw materials available: MEMORIES, UNDERSTANDINGS, EXPERIENCES and INTERPRETATIONS
  • 38. ‘Emplotment’ Narratives are composed of MEMORIES, UNDERSTANDINGS, EXPERIENCES and INTERPRETATIONS Narratives are composed of 3 main elements: Characters Action Plot The plot is the central feature of narrative: The plot is what makes the narrative: it brings together different episodes into a meaningful whole Events and episodes are not thrown together at random, but are linked together
  • 39. Narrator and audience Both narrator and audience will participate in the processes of linking, this is called emplotment
  • 40. Emplotment is social embedded There is a shared culture understanding that these events have a place in this narrative Shared symbols E.g. “I grew-up in the working class family’, “ My father fought for the Status-Aparte, he always dreamed of an other Aruba” “ I always had to share what I had with my sisters, material stuff were scare in those times” The narrative cannot stand alone but must refer to and draw on wider cultural narratives
  • 41. Shared meaning, stories are embedded in relationships
  • 42. Memories are mere interpretations In narrating a story social actors organize events into episodes which make the plot, they do this based on memories Memories are themselves interpretations, they are social products Reconstructions. That part of the ‘mediation of experience’ that sticks…
  • 43.
  • 44. Memory is reconstructive “Memory is not like a video record. It does not need images, and images are never enough, moreover our memories shade and patch and combine and delete [the best metaphor (analogy)to remembering is storytelling” (…)“ We constitute our souls by making up our lives, that is, by weaving stories about our past, by what we call memories. The tales we tell of ourselves are not a matter of recording what we have done and how we have felt. They must mesh with the rest of the world and with other peoples stories, at least in externals, but their real role is the creation of a life, a character.” (Hacking, 1995)
  • 45. Self and other Breaking the line between the self and the other The story of the self, identity: A person enmeshed in and produced within webs of social relationships Life stories must always incorporate the life stories of others They will not be the same, they will always be part of our own but others’ stories must always be part of our own Shared Social framework of meaning: both to interpret, produce our stories and to borrow stories in order to make it our own from a rich source of stories
  • 46. E.g. Stories have different voices and angles. The story of war http://vimeo.com/1378660518 and Enlisted http://vimeo.com/13787612Children Left Behind http://vimeo.com/13787881PTSD Experience http://vimeo.com/13764307all that lingers