With a Happy Heart
Sunday, April 26, 2015
Tuesday, April 22, 2014
One Tin Soldier
As a child, I remember my sister, Cathy’s fondness for the folksong, One Tin Soldier, a tale about the peace between people, Mountain people. However, since I was so little at the time I didn’t understand that it was an anti-war song. The other day I was in Publix grocery shopping when I saw the movie, Billy Jack, that featured the song. Somehow, all of this made me think about the folktales and legends that we have been discussing in class. So I grabbed the movie and came home to watch it. Billy Jack, a half-breed Navajo Indian and Vietnam War hero, defends college students from the townspeople who do not understand or like the hippie counter-culture. The movie tells a tale of oppression and racism that occurs among the Navajo tribes. Angered and outraged, Billy Jack, strikes back.
Go ahead and hate your neighbor; go ahead and cheat a friend.
Do it in the name of heaven; you can justify it in the end.
There won't be any trumpets blowin' come the judgment day
On the bloody morning after, one tin soldier rides away.
Movies, stories and music are powerful rhetorical artifacts. Audiences have been persuaded to examine their beliefs as well as give into their emotions while watching, listening and participating. Storytelling, folk tales, poetry and spoken word traditions are the roots of our rhetoric today. Songs, like One Tin Soldier remains as powerful today as it was in the late sixties. The irony of its longevity is that it is still relevant. Bands like U2 continue to use the seeds of folktales and rhetoric to influence culture today.
On the bloody morning after, one tin soldier rides away...Sunday, Bloody Sunday.
Monday, April 14, 2014
Bad Words - SPOILER ALERT
I’ve been
studying about competition and storytelling slams. Over the weekend the movie, Bad Words came
out in the theatres. It is a story about
Guy Trilby, a 40 year old middle school dropout who seeks revenge by attempting
to win a televised spelling bee. After finding
a loophole that all contestants must not have graduated the 8th
grade by the date of the National Spelling Bee, Trilby proceeds to advance to
the end. Throughout the movie I am
reminded that competitions aren’t always about winning, but are about honing
your skill set. One character, Chai, the young
kid that befriends Trilby reminds us of this.
Struggling with finding a friend in real life, Chai enjoys the
intelligent sarcastic and often black humor of his immature genius friend.
In addition
to the friendship that develops, another side of competition rears its head – aggression. Not only do the staff members show the ugly
side of agon, but the parents do as well.
In one scene, the Director of the National Spelling Bee fixes the
competition, disgracing the event and honor of competing. In her office, a host of angry parents
ridicule her for allowing Trilby to compete and request her to resign should he
be allowed to continue to compete. Parents
horrified that Trilby continues despite the measure taken to eliminate him,
behave irrationally, displaying non-sportsman like behaviors. Chai’s father, in an attempt to gain a
competitive edge, tells his son to befriend his enemy so Trilby cannot beat him
when the time comes. At one point the entire
crowd chats, “ Kick him out, kick him out" forcing the head of the Bee to aks for
respect to the honor of the competition.
Trilby responds by spelling his word accurately - disgracing the honor of the competition and the man that began the program.
I enjoyed the
black comic nature of the film. It was interesting to me to see that there are those parents that fight for
equality with “No Child Left Behind” wanting all children to earn awards
fighting against the agony of defeat and
those that fight like gladiators in the ring, until death. The film Bad Words demonstrates that arĂȘte and philotimias are required components of agon, or competitions.
Monday, April 7, 2014
Here Be Dragons
This past week I gave a speech on the myth of audience
studies, paralleling the myth of dragons to the ubitquitous words of what
constitutes an audience. In ancient times, uncharted regions on maps gave fearsome
legends of dragons to ward off persons from the dangers of the unknown, or
undefined, allowing words to quantify, keeping everyone satisfied with a
rational explanation of what lay beyond. The myth often takes on a life of its own, and the facts from the
original event, if they existed, become lost.
One tale or urban legend that comes to mind is folk song
and poem , Puff The Magic Dragon. The
lyrics tell a story of an ageless dragon, Puff and his playmate Jackie
Paper. Jackie grows older and loses
interest in imaginary friendships while Puff mourns the loss of innocence. Urban legend has suggested that Puff the
Magic Dragon is a story about drugs, not the hardships of growing up. Written during the sixties, many speculated
that Puff told a tale of drug abuse, giving
a new interpretation.
Dragons are wonderful creatures of our imagination, and
are forever etched in history. The myths, folk tales and legends of dragons offer
explanations for the unknown and make heroes out of ordinary men and women who tell
their tale. And as each generation
shares their tales, new interpretations will occur and legends will
develop.
Tuesday, April 1, 2014
Blue Apple Players
This week, mom and I were going through old
magazines from home- Louisville, Kentucky. One magazine, Today’s Woman, a free magazine in the area that mom had kept
featured a story on storyteller and playwright, Geraldine Snyder co-founder of
the Blue Apple Players.
The Blue Apple Players began in 1976 when I was in
elementary school. My mother remembered that my school, Middletown Elementary,
took a chance on two storytellers bringing the Blue Apple Players to our school
for their inaugural event. I still have vivid memories of their performance. I
remember sitting on the cold gym floor huddled with my classmates, hanging on
every dramatic moment as they share a tale of American history. While the Blue
Apple Players lean more towards acting than storytelling, they told the story
of “Johnny Appleseed”, a folk hero and American legend that introduced apple
trees to farmers across the new nation. At the time, I thought it was a simple
folktale. Almost 40 years later, I understand the complexity of the oral
tradition of narrative and how it impacts the American Identity. Johnny
Appleseed was only a character in a story to me then, but as an American legend
and folk hero, his story was passed along through the ages, allowing one to
sees how storytelling forms our identity - the American Identity. The Blue
Apple Players continued to perform at Middletown Elementary, I saw numerous
dramatic interpretations, but the story of Johnny Appleseed remains my
favorite.
Today, the Blue Apple players still perform for over
70,000 children in the Louisville area. They also visit four surround states
and have played in the Parker Theatre in Miami. This year they merged with the
local Walden School in hopes to continuing to provide a strong arts education
for creative young people using the power of dramatic storytelling. I feel
honored to have been a part of the initial success of something so powerful.
Tuesday, March 25, 2014
HONY
I love social media, not only for reconnecting or
keeping in touch but for being exposed to new ideas and creations. I use Instagram, FB, and Pinterest regularly. A couple of my favorite pages include Word
Porn, Dangerous Minds, Higher Thinking and HONY. Of the four, HONY ties to storytelling as it
shares the everyday lives, memories, and thoughts of the people of New York.
Blogger Brandon Stanton took candid photographs for three years showing people of all demographics. He started in 2010 with 6, 000 portraits, posting them on FB. In his first year, he was only taking photos; however, as his project grew he started sharing stories with his subjects. Today, there are photos of people alone, with their pets, with lovers, with friends and family. Each picture tells a story, a “photographic census”. Stanton focuses on focus on interesting people and their stories, demonstrating every emotion, condition, and magnificence of the human being. Stanton’s project has had numerous “copy cats”. Many universities have started their own pages to tell the stories of their staff, faculty and students.
Capturing FAU's stories might prove to be a cool idea for a service learning project/fundraiser. Stanton has successfully raised money with both his blog and book.
Blogger Brandon Stanton took candid photographs for three years showing people of all demographics. He started in 2010 with 6, 000 portraits, posting them on FB. In his first year, he was only taking photos; however, as his project grew he started sharing stories with his subjects. Today, there are photos of people alone, with their pets, with lovers, with friends and family. Each picture tells a story, a “photographic census”. Stanton focuses on focus on interesting people and their stories, demonstrating every emotion, condition, and magnificence of the human being. Stanton’s project has had numerous “copy cats”. Many universities have started their own pages to tell the stories of their staff, faculty and students.
Capturing FAU's stories might prove to be a cool idea for a service learning project/fundraiser. Stanton has successfully raised money with both his blog and book.
Tuesday, March 18, 2014
Significance of Objects
Every
object has a story, right? Objects carry
the tales of where, who, when, what, and why.
This week my nephew, Aaron, sent me an eBay auction listing of one of my
Grandmother’s needlepoint purses. I wondered who had owned it, and if they knew
the story behind my Grandmother. These
people didn’t have the memory of seeing the colorful rows of silk fabrics,
threads, and beautifully painted canvases.
And certainly, the purse didn’t evoke the memory of eating chicken salad
with grapes on Melba toast while hearing the buzz of sewing machines above for
them. So it got me thinking stories create value in objects. I wondered if
anyone else had thought about this before.
Through a
little research, I found an anthropological experiment that took 100 meaningless
items rounded up from thrift, stores, yard sales, and flea markets costing a
mere $128.74 to show the effect of narrative on any given object’s value. Researchers recruited 100 writers, comedians,
storytellers, and almost anyone they believed had great creativity. Each storyteller took one item, wrote a story,
and the team posted the ad on eBay. Each
listing included a note explaining the significance of the object had been
invented by a storyteller; therefore, no one was deceived in thinking the object had significantly more value. The result was a profit of over $3500. What
became most fascinating about the experiment was that the project itself became
a story, one that became co-created. The objects of significance became a
souvenir of the experiment.
This experiment then spawn an “object slam”, where audiences invented competing stories about an insignificant object. Expanding even further, the idea became a Museum exhibit, demonstrating human-object communications. The entire string of events was amazing me, further demonstrating how humans are homo narrans, each of us deeply ingrained with the human propensity for story-telling and its value.
This experiment then spawn an “object slam”, where audiences invented competing stories about an insignificant object. Expanding even further, the idea became a Museum exhibit, demonstrating human-object communications. The entire string of events was amazing me, further demonstrating how humans are homo narrans, each of us deeply ingrained with the human propensity for story-telling and its value.
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