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Posts Tagged ‘A Storied Career’

Stories of Islam May Help Generate Understanding

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

More listening and less panic will help us put Islam and Muslims in perspective.

This article is from Kathy Hansen’s blog,  A Storied Career, reprinted with her permission:

I have to admit, at this time of heated debate over religious freedom, that my knowledge of Islam is virtually nonexistent. Although I unconditionally support religious freedom, I admit to feeling slightly uneasy about Muslims.

Knowledge is, of course, the way to eradicate uneasiness and fear.

Islamicstories.jpgIn a highly thoughtful essay, The Power of Storytelling: Creating a New Future for American Muslims, <on the website PatheosWajahat Ali talks about the exalted position of storytelling and storytellers in early Muslim culture. Throughout history, of course, stories have “inform[ed] and influence[d] a cultural citizenry of its values and identity.”

But in the US today, stories of Islam and Muslims have devolved into “daily stories of vile stereotyping, fear-mongering, and hysteria,” prompting Ali to predict, “If these stories persist with such simplistic, one-dimensional caricatures and formulaic narratives, then the predictable third act can only end in tragedy.”

The answer, Ali suggests, is “finally telling our own stories in our own voices and using art and storytelling as a means of healing and education.”

The second half of Ali’s essay offers a number of resources in which Muslims are telling their stories. Writes Ali:

These stories will ultimately influence the greater American narrative reminding fellow citizens that no group is a cultural monolith worthy of being painted with only black and white colors, and that even Islam is capable of benefitting America with its unique spiritual and cultural gifts.

I, for one, would like to make an effort to learn more about Islam through its stories and those of its followers.

Ali’s piece is superb. I recommend it.

Myriad of ways to use storytelling

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

Stories can heal, educate, sell, empower, and/or  illuminate.  They can be told, performed, journaled, blogged, social media’d, and/or written.  The edges often blur between these categories.  I’ve heard that the perceived danger is that the definition would be too inclusive so the core of storytelling would be diluted.

I haven’t that fear.  As long as I’m made aware of the intention, I’m happy to mix and match.  But sometimes people form groups to explore specific interests.

A Special Interest Group (SIG) is a formal group created by and for National Storytelling Network (NSN) members joining together for a common purpose.

These groups and their purposes are:

Healing Story Alliance: to share our experience and our skills in the best ways to use stories to inform, inspire, nurture and heal.

Producers and Organizers: to encourage cooperation, networking and support among organizers of storytelling events.

Storytelling in Higher Education: to encourage cooperation, networking and support among college and university educators in storytelling.

Storytelling in Organizations: to bring narrative insights onto the contemporary business scene by documenting and promoting the constructive role and widespread importance of storytelling in corporate, non-profit, small business, education, and other settings.

Youth, Educators and Storytellers Alliance (YES!): to encourage educators and other adults to use storytelling with youth as an educational tool in classrooms and in other settings

In the blog A Storied Career Kathy Hansen explores traditional and postmodern forms/uses of applied storytelling such as journaling, blogging, organizational storytelling, storytelling for identity construction, storytelling in social media, storytelling for job search and career advancement.

There’s a new application on Facebook that can help you post your app_1_245679487958_1099stories in short Facebookable snippets. Snipisode lets you schedule status posts as episodes of a story or feature.  The way it works is you type or paste in a whole story and then with a click of a button snip up the story either by line or by periods. Then you choose a time either daily or every two days. The story will unfold on your status line.  Very cool.

It’s the Perils of Pauline of social media.

Bad Stories

Sunday, December 6th, 2009

I was inspired by the question, “are there uses of storytelling that are offensive or inappropriate” to do an internet search.  Not knowing what words to use I typed in “bad stories” and came up with

Bored.com – bad date stories

Lovestory.com –  love stores with bad or sad endings

MakingLemonade –  bad stories from single parents

TheFrisky – bad sex stories

Workingamerica.org – bad boss stores

Texas Hold’em – bad beat stores from the poker table

Badgolfer.com – what it says

There are bad customer service experiences, bad driver rants, regifting horror stories and reasons to tell bad adoption tales. You can find stories about bad Facebook, divorce, leadership, haircuts, journalism, and car dealer experiences. There were 253,000,000 entries for bad stories.

I was curious so I searched “good stories” and there are only 126,000,000 entries. Apparently Google says there are twice as many bad stories as good stories.

But all that is a digression (how easy to do with searches) from the original question, what stories are not OK?  According to Judy Rosemarin in Kathy Hansen’s blog, A Storied Career, the answer is gossip or false advertising.

I’d add lying with the intent to maliciously deceive. I’m not talking about exaggerating or embellishing a story, that’s fair in telling stories, but manipulating the truth to unduly influence someone is a bad story in my book.  What’s your bottom line?