Storytelling / Photo Credit: Mind Waves - Marilena
WHAT IS STORYTELLING IN FILMS? (In
the Entertainment industry.)
What is Storytelling in Films?
Storytelling Films
The story is at the heart of any good film. Special
effects, setting, stars – unless there is a good story
to be told – are meaningless.
Storytelling describes the social and cultural activity of
sharing stories, sometimes with improvisation, theatrics, or embellishment.
Every culture has its own stories or narratives, which are shared as a means of
entertainment, education, cultural preservation or instilling moral values.
Crucial elements of stories and storytelling include plot, characters and
narrative point of view.
The term "storytelling" can refer in a narrow
sense specifically to oral storytelling and also in a looser sense to
techniques used in other media to unfold or disclose the narrative of a story.
Film has developed out of a narrative and dramatic
tradition in which the art of storytelling is a central concern. Yet filmmakers
have also challenged the seductive and manipulative power of story through
playful resistance to narrative convention or by exploring other elements of
the medium: the interplay of image and sound, rhythm and gesture, rather than
reliance on plot mechanics or character psychology. But the audience for
non-narrative film is small: the rapt faces of the aircraft passengers watching
the flight attendant point out the nearest exit, remind us that we enjoy the
frisson of disaster but need to believe in the possibility of a happy ending.
Storytelling predates writing. The earliest forms of
storytelling were usually oral combined with gestures and expressions. In
addition to being part of religious rituals, some archaeologists believe rock
art may have served as a form of storytelling for many ancient cultures. The
Australian aboriginal people painted symbols from stories on cave walls as a
means of helping the storyteller remember the story. The story was then told
using a combination of oral narrative, music, rock art and dance, which bring
understanding and meaning of human existence through remembrance and enactment
of stories. People have used the carved trunks of living trees and ephemeral
media (such as sand and leaves) to record stories in pictures or with writing.
Complex forms of tattooing may also represent stories, with information about
genealogy, affiliation and social status.
With the advent of writing and the use of stable, portable
media, stories were recorded, transcribed and shared over wide regions of the
world. Stories have been carved, scratched, painted, printed or inked onto wood
or bamboo, ivory and other bones, pottery, clay tablets, stone, palm-leaf
books, skins (parchment), bark cloth, paper, silk, canvas and other textiles,
recorded on film and stored electronically in digital form. Oral stories
continue to be created, improvisational by impromptu storytellers, as well as
committed to memory and passed from generation to generation, despite the
increasing popularity of written and televised media in much of the world.
Contemporary storytelling
Modern storytelling has a broad purview. In addition to
its traditional forms (fairy-tales, folktales, mythology, legends, fables etc.),
it has extended itself to representing history, personal narrative, political
commentary and evolving cultural norms. Contemporary storytelling is also
widely used to address educational objectives. New forms of media are creating
new ways for people to record, express and consume stories. Tools for
asynchronous group communication can provide an environment for individuals to
reframe or recast individual stories into group stories. Games and other
digital platforms, such as those used in interactive fiction or interactive
storytelling, may be used to position the user as a character within a bigger
world. Documentaries, including interactive web documentaries, employ
storytelling narrative techniques to communicate information about their topic.
Self-regulatory stories, created for their cathartic and therapeutic effect,
are growing in their use and application, as in Psychodrama, Drama Therapy and
Playback Theater. Storytelling is also used as a means by which to precipitate
psychological and social change in the practice of trans-formative arts.
Oral traditions of storytelling are found in several civilizations’;
they predate the printed and online press. Storytelling was used to explain
natural phenomena, bards told stories of creation and developed a pantheon of
gods and myths. Oral stories passed from one generation to the next and
storytellers were regarded as healers, leader, spiritual guides, teachers,
cultural secrets keepers and entertainers. Oral storytelling came in various
forms including songs, poetry, chants and dance.
Albert Bates Lord examined oral narratives from field
transcripts of Yugoslav oral bards collected by Milman Parry in the 1930s, and
the texts of epics such as the Odyssey and Beowulf. Lord found that a large
part of the stories consisted of text which was improvised during the telling
process.
Lord identified two types of story vocabulary. The first
he called "formulas": "rosy-fingered dawn", "the
wine-dark sea" and other specific set phrases had long been known of in
Homer and other oral epics. Lord, however, discovered that across many story
traditions, fully 90% of an oral epic is assembled from lines which are
repeated verbatim or which use one-for-one-word substitutions. In other words,
oral stories are built out of set phrases which have been stockpiled from a
lifetime of hearing and telling stories.
The other type of story vocabulary is theme, a set
sequence of story actions that structure a tale. Just as the teller of tales
proceeds line-by-line using formulas, so he proceeds from event-to-event using
themes. One near-universal theme is repetition, as evidenced in Western
folklore with the "rule of three": Three brothers set out, three
attempts are made, three riddles are asked. A theme can be as simple as a
specific set sequence describing the arming of a hero, starting with shirt and
trousers and ending with headdress and weapons. A theme can be large enough to
be a plot component. For example: a hero proposes a journey to a dangerous
place / he disguises himself / his disguise fools everybody / except for a
common person of little account (a crone, a tavern maid or a woodcutter) / who
immediately recognizes him / the commoner becomes the hero's ally, showing
unexpected resources of skill or initiative. A theme does not belong to a
specific story, but may be found with minor variation in many different
stories. Themes may be no more than handy prefabricated parts for constructing
a tale, or they may represent universal truths – ritual-based, religious
truths, as James Frazer saw in The Golden Bough, or archetypal, psychological
truths, as Joseph Campbell describes in The Hero with a Thousand Faces.
Folklorists sometimes divide oral tales into two main
groups: Märchen and Sagen. These are German terms for which there are no exact
English equivalents, however we have approximations:
Märchen, loosely translated as "fairy tale(s)"
(lit. little stories), take place in a kind of separate
"once-upon-a-time" world of nowhere-in-particular, at an
indeterminate time in the past. They are clearly not intended to be understood
as true. The stories are full of clearly defined incidents, and peopled by
rather flat characters with little or no interior life. When the supernatural
occurs, it is presented matter-of-factly, without surprise. Indeed, there is
very little effect, generally; bloodcurdling events may take place, but with
little call for emotional response from the listener.
Sagen, best translated as "legends", are
supposed to have actually happened, very often at a particular time and place,
and they draw much of their power from this fact. When the supernatural
intrudes (as it often does), it does so in an emotionally fraught manner. Ghost
and lovers' leap stories belong in this category, as do many UFO stories and
stories of supernatural beings and events.
Another important examination of orality in human life is
Walter J. Ong's Orality and Literacy: The Technologizing of the Word (1982).
Ong studies the distinguishing characteristics of oral traditions, how oral and
written cultures interact and condition one another, and how they ultimately
influence human epistemology.
Storytelling and learning
Storytelling is a means for sharing and interpreting
experiences. Peter L. Berger says human life is narrative rooted, humans
construct their lives and shape their world into homes in terms of these
groundings and memories. Stories are universal in that they can bridge
cultural, linguistic and age-related divides. Storytelling can be adaptive for
all ages, leaving out the notion of age segregation. Storytelling can be used
as a method to teach ethics, values and cultural norms and differences.
Learning is most effective when it takes place in social environments that
provide authentic social cues about how knowledge is to be applied. Stories
function as a tool to pass on knowledge in a social context. So, every story
has 3 parts. First, the setup (The Hero's world before the adventure starts).
Second, The Confrontation (The hero's world turned upside down). Third, The
Resolution (Hero conquers villain, but it's not enough for Hero to survive. The
Hero or World must be transformed). Any story can be framed in such format.
Human knowledge is based on stories and the human brain
consists of cognitive machinery necessary to understand, remember and tell
stories. Humans are storytelling organisms that both individually and socially,
lead storied lives. Stories mirror human thought as humans think in narrative
structures and most often remember facts in story form. Facts can be understood
as smaller versions of a larger story; thus, storytelling can supplement
analytical thinking. Because storytelling requires auditory and visual senses
from listeners, one can learn to organize their mental representation of a
story, recognize structure of language and express his or her thoughts.
Stories tend to be based on experiential learning, but
learning from an experience is not automatic. Often a person needs to attempt
to tell the story of that experience before realizing its value. In this case,
it is not only the listener who learns, but the teller who also becomes aware
of his or her own unique experiences and background. This process of
storytelling is empowering as the teller effectively conveys ideas and, with
practice, is able to demonstrate the potential of human accomplishment.
Storytelling taps into existing knowledge and creates bridges both culturally
and motivational toward a solution.
Stories are effective educational tools because listeners
become engaged and therefore remember. Storytelling can be seen as a foundation
for learning and teaching. While the story listener is engaged, they are able
to imagine new perspectives, inviting a transformative and empathetic
experience. This involves allowing the individual to actively engage in the
story as well as observe, listen and participate with minimal guidance. Listening to a storyteller can create lasting
personal connections, promote innovative problem solving and foster a shared
understanding regarding future ambitions. The listener can then activate
knowledge and imagine new possibilities. Together a storyteller and listener
can seek best practices and invent new solutions. Because stories often have
multiple layers of meanings, listeners have to listen closely to identify the
underlying knowledge in the story. Storytelling is used as a tool to teach
children the importance of respect through the practice of listening. As well
as connecting children with their environment, through the theme of the
stories, and give them more autonomy by using repetitive statements, which
improve their learning to learn competence. It is also used to teach children
to have respect for all life, value inter-connectedness and always work to
overcome adversity. To teach this a Kinesthetic learning style would be used,
involving the listeners through music, dream interpretation, or dance.
Storytelling as art form
Aesthetics The art of narrative is, by definition, an
aesthetic enterprise, and there are a number of artistic elements that
typically interact in well-developed stories. Such elements include the
essential idea of narrative structure with identifiable beginnings, middles,
and endings, or exposition-development-climax-resolution-denouement, normally
constructed into coherent plot lines; a strong focus on temporarily, which
includes retention of the past, attention to present action and protection/future
anticipation; a substantial focus on characters and characterization which is
"arguably the most important single component of the novel"; a given heteroglossia
of different voices dialogically at play – "the sound of the human voice,
or many voices, speaking in a variety of accents, rhythms and registers";
possesses a narrator or narrator-like voice, which by definition
"addresses" and "interacts with" reading audiences (see
Reader Response theory); communicates with a Wayne Booth-esque rhetorical
thrust, a dialectic process of interpretation, which is at times beneath the
surface, conditioning a plotted narrative, and at other times much more
visible, "arguing" for and against various positions; relies
substantially on now-standard aesthetic figuration, particularly including the
use of metaphor, metonymy, synecdoche and irony (see Hayden White, Metahistory
for expansion of this idea); is often enmeshed in intertextuality, with copious
connections, references, allusions, similarities, parallels, etc. to other
literatures; and commonly demonstrates an effort toward bildungsroman, a
description of identity development with an effort to evince becoming in
character and community.
Festivals Storytelling festivals feature the work of
several storytellers. Elements of the oral storytelling art form include
visualization (the seeing of images in the mind's eye), and vocal and bodily
gestures. In many ways, the art of storytelling draws upon other art forms such
as acting, oral interpretation and performance studies.
Several storytelling organizations started in the U.S.
during the 1970s. One such organization was the National Association for the
Perpetuation and Preservation of Storytelling (NAPPS), now the National
Storytelling Network (NSN) and the International Storytelling Center (ISC). NSN
is a professional organization that helps to organize resources for tellers and
festival planners. The ISC runs the National Storytelling Festival in
Jonesborough, TN. Australia followed
their American counterparts with the establishment of storytelling guilds in
the late 1970s. Australian storytelling today has individuals and groups across
the country who meet to share their stories. The UK's Society for Storytelling
was founded in 1993, bringing together tellers and listeners, and each year
since 2000 has run a National Storytelling Week the first week of February.
Currently, there are dozens of storytelling festivals and
hundreds of professional storytellers around the world, and an international
celebration of the art occurs on World Storytelling Day.
Emancipation of the story
In oral traditions, stories are kept alive by being told
again and again. The material of any given story naturally undergoes several
changes and adaptations during this process. When and where oral tradition was
pushed back in favor of print media, the literary idea of the author as originator
of a story's authoritative version changed people's perception of stories
themselves. In centuries following, stories tended to be seen as the work of
individuals rather than a collective effort. Only recently when a significant
number of influential authors began questioning their own roles, the value of
stories as such – independent of authorship – was again recognized. Literary
critics such as Roland Barthes even proclaimed the Death of the Author.
References
& Credits: Google, Wikipedia, Wikihow, WikiBooks, Pinterest, IMDB, Linked
In, Indie Wire, Film Making Stuff, Hiive, History Channel, Film Daily, New York
Film Academy, The Balance, Careers Hub, The Numbers, Film Maker, Film Site, TV
Guide Magazine, Blurb, Media Match, Quora, Creative Skill Set, Chron, Investopedia,
Variety, No Film School, WGA, BBC, Daily Variety, The Film Agency, Best Sample
Resume, How Stuff Works, Studio Binder, Career Trend, Producer's Code of
Credits, Truity, Production Hub, Producers Guild of America, Film Connection, Variety,
Wolf Crow, Get In Media, Production Beast, Sony Pictures, Warner Bros, UCAS, Frankenbite,
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Productions, Mad Studios, Rewire, DP School, Film Reference, DGA, IATSE, ASC,
MPAA, HFPA, MPSE, CDG, AFI, Box Office Mojo, Rotten Tomatoes, Indie Film
Hustle, The Numbers, Netflix, Vimeo, Instagram, Pinterest, Metacritic, Hulu, Reddit,
NATO, Mental Floss, Slate, Locations Hub, Film Industry Statistics, Guinness World
Records, The Audiopedia, Imagination for People, P.O.V.,
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Storytelling / Photo Credit: Mind Waves - Marilena
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