Tuesday, 27 May 2014

"Was that a true story?"

I will shortly be presenting my first conference paper outside the university - hopefully it won't be too intimidating a venue for this debut, as it's a postgraduate symposium just down the road at the University of York's Dept of Theatre, Film and Television (TFTV), on 2nd June. 

The question I've chosen to tackle in this short paper is one of the things that has surprised me most about storytelling to teenagers: their frequent response to a fantastical story being 'Was that a true one?' Younger children rarely ask this (being less concerned about the difference between reality and fantasy, perhaps), so it takes me aback that their older counterparts often do.  Can a 15-year-old really think that a woman was transformed into a whale?  Or does she actually mean something else by her question?  And what implications does this have for the storytelling exchange between a teller and their teenage listeners?

This is the abstract I've drafted - any thoughts welcome in advance of the symposium!:


‘Was that a true one?’ – teenagers and traditional stories

Cath Heinemeyer, PhD student, York St John University / York Theatre Royal

I use traditional stories and myths as the basis of much of my practice-based research into storytelling with teenagers.  It could be argued that I am importing material, and genres, that are fairly alien to most young people, rather than drawing on their own ‘grounded aesthetic’ (Walcon 2012).  Indeed, the reaction after a story finishes is often a disoriented ‘Was that a true story?’, or variants thereof.  Implicit in this question is some or all of the following:

          A querying of my authority to tell that particular story; 

          Unfamiliarity with story conventions;

          Musing whether this story is a useful source of knowledge and/or worth passing on;

          The need for a conversational and psychological bridge back into ‘normal’ communication and ‘reality’.

Traditional motifs can, however, act as a ‘rhetorical convention’ (Kershaw 2007), allowing young people to explore possibilities beyond the constraints of their own assumptions.  Tolkien described this story reality as a ‘secondary world’ or ‘sub-creation’ (1968).  In this paper I draw on my work with groups of teenagers in both mainstream and alternative education settings to exemplify how traditional material can provide a surprisingly powerful springboard for young people to tell their own stories.

My experience supports Zipes’ (1995) view that young people benefit from gaining a sense of mastery over story motifs and archetypes by comparing or layering stories over each other.  This contextualises their intellectual concerns about ‘truthfulness’; it also gives them distance from the magical world of the story, as well as from their own daily lives.  In contexts where young people feel safe to draw on aspects of their own personal experience, I describe how certain individuals and groups have moved from this position of ownership of traditional story structures to generate powerful contemporary stories.

Friday, 23 May 2014

What stories do teenagers like?

When I tell people I am researching storytelling with teenagers, the most common question is then, 'What sort of stories do teenagers like, then?'  There is a scepticism in the question: surely it's a matter of competing with films and horror or fantasy fiction?

for example.....!


Well, yes and no.  And I don't know.  In a way it's a 'shadow' question to my main research questions.  The stories which do something for teenagers do themselves act as a key to the 'bigger' questions of what storytelling can do for teenagers, how teenagers engage with storytelling.

My instinct has told me two things from the start, and experience so far has confirmed these. 

Firstly, that I should choose stories which contain all of life.  That is, adult themes such as betrayal, disappointment, violence, abuse, sex, love, exclusion, conflict, should be in there.  These things are present in most of the world's fairytales and mythologies, and the stories help to make sense of them.

The other night I watched a brilliant documentary on the BBC iPlayer, 'Tyger Takes On Porn' - about young people's ever-increasing access to pornography and how it's affecting their relationships.  Watching it, I was thrown back into all my own adolescent anxieties about fitting in, keeping up, being normal.  It reminded me how readily teenagers take on the dominant cultural narratives and how ill-equipped they are to challenge them.  This reinforced for me the fact that sex, for example, should be woven into the plots of stories so that all its myriad sides can be seen as part of a whole story, whole lives, whole relationships.  This might just act as a counterweight to the story of sex which tells young people they must conform to certain trends or stereotypes. 

Secondly, that stories for teenagers should not be neatly wrapped up, or have a simple moral.  Rather, if time permits, they should be involved and open and multi-faceted, like myths.  There should be multiple points of entry and potential identification.  I am guided here by my own reaction to storytellers I listen to.  Hearing the wonderful Jan Blake tell the West African epic of Sogolon over two hours, my friend and I spent another two hours in intense argument and debate over the characters' decisions.  I was struck by the dilemmas of the parents in the story; she was intensely concerned whether the hero had abused or rescued the heroine... Nothing was tied up, everything was up for interpretation.  This is what teenagers need too, I think.  Not parables, but new landscapes in which they can explore what happens to X when Y does Z and whether it was Y's fault or indeed F's, or maybe it was fate or society....

These two 'principles' are not research, however - they are beliefs, or even preconceived notions.  To test them, I'd need to try other kinds of stories as well, where there is perhaps a simple message.  There might well be a place for the simple metaphorical tale  - for example, therapists who use story often choose these kinds of tale (see for example G.W. Burns' (2005) 101 Healing Stories for Kids and Teens: using metaphors in therapy) - but I am not drawn to them when faced with a teenage audience.  And it's very hard for a storyteller to tell a story she doesn't feel like telling.

And yet I have to confess that teenagers often seem to like telling them.  At the Young Storyteller of the Year competition I heard the story of the giant Fear who gets smaller the nearer you go to him, told and received with great enthusiasm.  Teenagers, like anyone, like what they recognise.  Sometimes, if I tell a story that seems too 'different' or morally ambiguous, the reaction will be simply 'that story was weird'.

So what marks out my practice as 'research', then? How will I use my practice as a vehicle to answer this 'shadow' question?  I try to pay attention to what surprises me.  I have been struck by the response of two different groups of teenagers with additional needs to the hero myths of various cultures.  I have been just as struck by the uproar with which another group responded to a story ending which did not please them - which violated their sense of what was a 'proper' story.  These 'janglings', where a group makes its collective feelings known, are one thing. And on a finer-grained scale, it's the old thing: in the eye contact between me and the listeners, the moment-to-moment shifts in mood and attention, that you always attend to anyway as a storyteller.  It's a matter of attending to it more critically, storing it away for reflection afterwards.

Next on my reading list is Gail de Vos' annotated bibliography 'Storytelling with Young Adults: a guide to tales for teens'.  I am interested to see whether her choices of material chime with my instincts and findings so far. 

Monday, 5 May 2014

More musings on copying and retelling

On Friday I attended a seminar led by my main academic supervisor Matthew Reason on 'documentation and disappearance' which raised further thoughts around copying and retelling (see previous posts). 

One theme we discussed is the ephemerality of performance - how the telling of a story, say, can never be repeated or fully documented, so there is a little bit of loss, or death even, at the heart of it.  We fear this and make many and varied efforts to capture and retain the essence of the experience.  This struck a big jangling chord with me.  Of course I have to document my workshops for the purposes of my research, but is there another deeper and more basic reason for it?

Last week I held a workshop with a group of Key Stage 3 pupils with additional learning needs.  I hadn't seen them since November, that's six months ago now.  That time I told them the Sumerian myth of 'Lugalbanda' and the group made a poster retelling the story visually - since then, the poster has remained on the classroom wall.  So I wasn't that surprised that they all recalled the session, but I was astounded by one boy who retold us the whole thing in great detail.  He gave many visual details which I had put into my original telling, but his words were all his own, and they were fluent and moving.  There was stunned silence and then applause.  He put his head in his hands, as if overwhelmed by the effort he'd just made. 

This was, of course, like a birthday present for me, and his teacher.  We got it on audio tape.  We were delighted that it had made such an impression on him, and that he had revealed such a talent.  But what exactly was delightful about this?  He had stuck quite closely to my version of the story, rather than making significant interpretations of his own.  This happens quite often, particularly with classes less familiar with drama and creative work.  

You could say the poster, and the retelling, were as much for the gratification of myself as storyteller - to assure me that my work was not ephemeral and pointless - as for the young people.  Maybe he felt my strong desire to hear the story back from him, and this was the cause of his exhaustion afterwards. 

I suppose the other question for me is: if a young person deeply absorbs and retells the details of my version of a story, are they also unquestioningly accepting my version of its causality, morality, themes?  How can I find this out?  And what does it mean for how I ought to tell?  Ought I to leave more 'blank spaces' for the listeners to fill in their own details? 

There could be a role for this simple absorption of a story.  Over a lifetime we integrate and reexamine all these stories which influence us, and create out of them what we need.  But I must admit it is gratifying when this process (rarely) materialises in front of your eyes.  I have had workshops where young people have moved well free of my telling and its moral arc, and used it to generate new material of their own - and this is where a real sense of the rightness and value of a story come in.  But I can't make this happen if the conditions are not right. 

I continue to believe that retelling is the first step towards transformation, rewriting of the story and (in a small way) of oneself, but it has become a bit more of a problematic idea for me. 

Saturday, 19 April 2014

Storytelling/retelling/reading/copying/transforming

In his talk at the 'Storytelling and the Voice' symposium (see previous post) Prof Mike Wilson explored Walter Benjamin's distinction between 'reading' and 'copying', from his 1928 essay 'Einbahnstrasse' ('One-Way Street').  This idea generated a lot of discussion.

Reading, according to Benjamin, is like soaring over a landscape in an aeroplane - you might miss an awful lot of detail, as well as what it actually feels like to be in that landscape.  Copying - say a notable quote or a poem - is like walking along the paths of that landscape on foot - feeling its scale and texture, noticing everything.  I do a lot of copying out of texts myself for the same reason.

Mike suggested, and we discussed, the similarity between this 'copying' form of close experiential reading and the retelling of a story - which involves re-walking the whole path of the story.  You feel the story a different way in retelling than in listening to someone else tell it - you are listening to it in a more dynamic way - because you both know and don't know what's coming next.  And as most storytelling is retelling, most storytelling is therefore, also, close reading.  Of course, in this form of reading is a personal transformation of the meanings in the story - or maybe better put, the reteller adds their own layer to the story and passes it on in this new form.  This is how all stories passed from one person to another (whether orally, digitally or in writing) contain many voices, not just that of the current teller.

In workshops I lead with teenagers, I almost always follow my telling of a story with an 'assimilation' exercise which is very akin to this copying process.  This might be retelling the story in pairs, passing a ball or stone between you - or round the circle, if it's a small or confident group.  Or it might be drawing images, writing key words, in a free-association process, and then reassembling these into a group poster.  This poster might be a chronological retelling of the story, but more often it isn't.  Groups usually choose to group the images and words thematically.  This process is a sort of group negotiation of what characters, symbols, places and themes are most important in the story.  Here's one from a group of young teenagers with additional learning needs:


The story is the true one of William Kamkwamba, a 14-year-old Malawian boy who helped his village during a famine by using rubbish from the scrapheap, and his own engineering skills, to construct windmills for electric light, water pumps and mobile phone batteries.  The most important themes, for this group, appear to be William's large and hungry family, the rubbish tip and the windmill itself.  That is, William's problem, his resources, and his ultimate achievement.  Other groups might home in on something else - the bullying William experienced, his expulsion from school for not being able to pay the fees. 

On finishing it, the group immediately wanted it to be put up on the classroom wall, and the teacher cleared another display there and then to accommodate it.  I will make use of it as a starting point when I return to work with this class soon.  Returning their story to them is the next round in the retelling game, and then we can layer other stories on top.

This poster is a group retelling, which is also a reshaping, of the story.  It is absolutely a form of literacy.  I started out this PhD feeling anxious about having to be seen to develop pupils' literacy through my work in secondary schools.  This anxiety is now much diminished - as I see (by walking the path, you might say!) how much pupils' sense of agency seems to be boosted from mastering a story by retelling it.  

Friday, 18 April 2014

'Storytelling and the Voice' symposium at George Ewart Evans Centre for Storytelling

Since I began this PhD back in October I've been searching for the 'storyteller-academics' - those who are storytellers themselves, but are studying it with open minds from without as well as within.  That is, those who are exploring and challenging the boundaries of storytelling, yet always keeping at heart the understanding of what it is and feels like. 

It has taken me a while to find them because they are in various different disciplines in their various universities - English Literature, Media, Health, Theatre.  But their 'nest' is undeniably the George Ewart Evans Centre for Storytelling at the University of Glamorgan, where among many other projects they hold an annual symposium.  Hamish Fyfe, Karen Lewis, Patrick Ryan, Mike Wilson, Emily Underwood-Lee and others involved in organising the event - thanks for a wonderful and stimulating weekend. 


The incredible currency of the words 'storytelling' and 'narrative' at present make it hard to focus on the value of the storytelling exchange.  Anything from newspaper articles to Hollywood films to letters to problem pages can be defined as storytelling and often is, but the effect of this can be to deny the special status of A Story, told to A Person (or Persons) by Another Person.  Yet over-reaction against this tendency can lead to zealous policing of the boundaries of Proper Storytelling and perhaps fossilisation of certain habits and customs which have accreted in the storytelling revival.  You can see this in the confused reaction to 'digital storytelling' - either there is a wholesale, postmodern acceptance that we are in a brave new dawn where everyone is a storyteller, or a deploring of the loss of human contact and community bonding.

This symposium was, in contrast, a wonderful exploration of how the kernel of storytelling is now situated in the digital era.  Prof Mike Wilson's keynote on the multiplicity of the voice gave me a new way of looking at the storytelling act itself - and pricked me to think more about listenership and the voice of the listener.  His and Karen Lewis' work on Project Aspect (engaging the public in climate change debates through digital and conversational storytelling) was particularly interesting in this regard.  Hamish Fyfe's provocation suggested that the digital era might have the potential for new forms of storytelling to emerge, but that a cacophony of individual voices telling their own emotional and personal experiences does not necessarily add up to this.  Instead, this 'new vernacular' needs to engage with the power structures that permeate the internet as much as any other place - and perhaps seek formats which enable a 'collective howl'.

Just to mention a couple more: all filmmakers seem to describe themselves as storytellers, but Chris Morris really is - or rather, he is a story-convenor.  His work over the past few decades has genuinely given voice to deprived children, and student sex workers, among others.  His stripped-down style allows for modern storytelling that packs a punch - and it was chastening to hear that the BBC is losing the appetite for his stories, which do not always fit into their preferred narrative structures.  And Lisa Heledd Jones' work was interesting for having travelled from digital storytelling to oral narrative, and back and forward again exploring their various possibilities - storying landscapes as as to serve her community and others.  Her presentation was as much a performance as a talk, which brought to life her community initiative which sought to rewrite a narrative of decline in her native village. 


For me the common thread in all this was that Proper Storytelling can be digital, multivocal, multimedia, personal and many other storytelling-movement-custom-violating things, but it must be about a community and not just an individual.  Sending subjective impressions and emotions out into the ether may be cathartic, but the voice must contain other voices, and have the listener in mind, to count.

Wednesday, 12 March 2014

A Storyteller's Agenda

One Monday 10th March the iCAN centre - which hosts my PhD - organised a discussion seminar on 'Narrative and Adolescence', part of a series of really stimulating events on 'narrative and...' exploring the status and roles of narrative in our culture. On previous occasions the gap has been filled by 'mental health', 'food', 'visual arts' and so on, but since the theme for Monday was 'adolescence' I was given the opportunity to present, as a performance, some of my practice-based research to date.

'Findings' might always be a tricky quantity in a practice-led, arts-based PhD, but I do aspire to claim relevance, some generalisability and certainly communicability for my research.  The challenge was to find a sufficiently tentative format to present my thoughts, questions and inklings so far.

I decided to assign the audience the role of a group of teenagers, and I led them through a 'typical storytelling workshop' from start to finish, explaining to them my difficulties and observations as we went along.

I don't know whether it 'worked' or not but it was an interesting experiment for me, to give a sort of scripted performance as a means of discussing academic research.  There was, for both me and them, the relief of an (unscripted) story in the middle of it.

A key point I wanted to make was the following: while the storyteller's tenet that 'listeners will take what they need from a story' is partially true, I have come to realise that the storyteller inevitably shapes their response to it - in fact, sometimes (e.g. with a shy group who are unused to storytelling or drama) I have found that it's very difficult for listeners to get any independence from the storyteller's version of the story's moral arc.  So the storyteller needs to take responsibility for choosing and then shaping the story in such a way that difficult themes/choices/moral issues are given a context that makes them meaningful.  Whether (s)he thinks consciously about it or not, (s)he will imprint his/her own agenda on it and therefore on the minds of the listeners.

One corollary of this is that I need to develop my skills in helping groups transform stories to their own ends.  The second is that this realisation has made me a) plan my stories more carefully than I used to and b) think more explicitly about why I choose certain stories and what my agenda is in structuring them. If I'm going to lay this agenda open to challenge, I should first of all look at what it is!

So, to conclude my talk at 'Narrative and Adolescence', I compiled the underlying values I am, like it or not, consciously or not, trying to transmit when I tell my favourite stories.



A Storyteller’s Agenda
Cath Heinemeyer

These things that are inside you –
Your anger, your uncontainable longings, your lostness, and your newness to yourself –
They are heavy and good and necessary.
The world would stop turning without them.
So cup them carefully in your hands;
Do not sell them,
Or spill them on the ground for the world to spin twisted fables from.

We face terrible things and awesome challenges. You may have a poor inheritance.
So resourcefulness is everything;
Feel it resonate in others here present.
Keep your eyes and ears open and your instinct tuned,
See the human in everything.
And be persistent!
Don’t aim to please but to endure;
Don’t consume but generate…
It is these things that will enable us to prevent – or transform – the deluge.

Arrogance is a hindrance,
Prejudice is a burden.
People are complex systems but every cause has an effect.
What you give will come back to you,
What you take will be taken in double measure.
No matter what surrounds you, even in the closing moments of your tragedies, you always have these choices.
But first rise above that ‘you’, that ‘choice’,
Float high above them and view the whole landscape.
See its lofty vantage points and its sullen swamps,
Its mires and its traps set by the powerful.
But others have trod this country before and left signs.

The things that are inside you are good and true –
Even the unspeakable things –
Here in this moment we will cup them in our hands together.
After that it is up to you.



Tuesday, 18 February 2014

The context for storytelling: paper

Since starting this PhD, a key theme to emerge very quickly has been that of 'context'.  I have suspected since the beginning that what is different about storytelling for/with adolescents is much more to do with the context - or what Michael Wilson (in his 1997 book on adolescents' oral culture) calls 'paraperformance' - than on the actual telling. The influence of context on an audience's engagement with an artform is a basic idea in art research, which I have kept coming across in different forms. 

For example, Augusto Boal in 'Theatre of the Oppressed' describes how Shakespeare originally wrote his plays for an audience who would be chatting, flirting, buying gifts of fruit during the performance - and would need seizing by the scruff of the neck.  The much more reverential atmosphere in which we now enjoy Shakespeare plays makes them a fundamentally different experience now.

Back in November I gave a paper here at York St John University to a 'Research Snapshots' conference in the Arts Faculty.  This was very much an effort to capture my position at the outset of this PhD - the beliefs I have started to crystallise through my years as a freelance storyteller about the contextual factors influencing a storytelling performance (of any kind) to a contemporary audience of young people.  Until I work out how to attach documents into this blog, here it is in full!:


‘It’s not about the story’: articulating a practice-as-research inquiry into storytelling with adolescents through a focus on context

Cath Heinemeyer, 1st year PhD candidate

Key words: storytelling, reflective practice, context

 

Here I am standing before you as a storyteller of the 21st century, about to embark on three years of practice-led doctoral research into storytelling with, for and by adolescents – in many cases challenging, troubled adolescents with thoroughly modern problems in their lives.  In this paper I will draw on my own practice to date and that of others, in order to lay out my starting assumptions, values and questions about teenagers and the contexts in which they might benefit from engaging with story.

Yet, to set the scene for you, and to start to articulate my own research inquiry, I need to start with a brief sojourn in the past, in times and places where oral storytelling was a simple fact of life.  So let me take you back to the 1860s in the Scottish Highlands.  The folklorist Alexander Carmichael described a ‘ceilidh’, an evening session in the house of a local storyteller (Briggs 1977, p.3):

“The house of the storyteller is already full, and it is difficult to get inside, and away from the cold wind and sleet without.  But with that politeness native to the people, the stranger is pressed to come forward and occupy the seat vacated for him beside the houseman.  The house is roomy and clean, if homely, with its bright peat fire in the middle of the floor.  There are many present – men and women, boys and girls.  All the women are seated, and most of the men. Girls are crouched between the knees of fathers or brothers or friends, while boys are perched wherever – boy-like – they can climb...The houseman is twisting twigs of heather into ropes to hold down thatch, a neighbour crofter is twining quicken roots into cords to tie cows, while another is plaiting bent grass into baskets to hold meal.  The housewife is spinning, a daughter is carding, another daughter is teasing, while a third daughter, supposed to be working, is away in the background conversing in low whispers with the son of a neighbouring crofter…The tale is full of incident, action and pathos…  Truth overcomes craft, skill conquers strength, and bravery is rewarded.  Occasionally a momentary excitement occurs when heat and sleep overpower a boy, and he tumbles down among the people below, to be trounced out and sent home.  When the story is ended it is discussed and commented upon, and the different characters praised or blamed according to their merits and the views of the critics.”

 

Here we have laid out for us a very vivid picture of one particular, intergenerational social context for storytelling.  I would like you to note that teenagers are very much a part of it, and I would add that most likely the tale told had a teenager as its protagonist – perhaps a young hero going to find and defeat his family’s foe, or a folktale of a young girl cast out of her home and forced to seek her fortune. 

Apart from that, the key point here is that this context for storytelling worked.  It was deeply, intimately embedded in the lives of the participants – it made sense of those lives, and enriched them.

This context is also, however, dead and gone in the UK.  Lawrence Millman (1977) documented meetings with some of the ‘last seanachies’ (traditional bards) in remote parts of the West of Ireland – old storytellers who had lost their audiences and purpose.  Sean Murphy, reduced to telling stories to his sheep so as to keep them in mind; Tomas Walsh, from whom no tale could be dragged because the television drowned them out; the Traveller Mickey Ward who as a young man had travelled from town to town exchanging stories for bed and board, but who in advanced age struggled even to tempt his youngest grandchild to listen to one of his half-forgotten ‘histories’.  They are poignant figures, cultural relics, whose experience makes it explicit that there can be no storytelling without listeners, and without a context in which storytelling is felt to be essential. 

And yet Mickey provides a positive signpost to the future too.  For decades he stopped telling stories and forgot them all, until one day he was forced to go into hospital for an extended stay, and something about the environment ‘switched on’ his stories again.  ‘I don’t know how it happened.  The stories started comin’ back t’me aisy an’ free, like well-trained ponies.  An’ then I started tellin’ them t’other patients.  If there was a fellow in bed, middlin’ bad, I’d get in a place where he could see me an’ hear me talkin’ and hear me tellin’ me stories.  I’d sit beside the fellow that was worrit an’ sick, an’ I’d tell him, we’ll say, ‘The Little Hairy Man of the Forest’, what I hadn’t told in twenty years.”  (Millman 1977, p.120-121) The hospital chaplain praised Mickey for ‘doing more for the patients than the doctors could’, and called him a saint. 

What was it about the hospital that brought the stories back?  The captive audience, the lack of distractions, the shared experience?  The fact that Mickey’s own life had recently been hanging in the balance?  The validation by an authority figure of Mickey’s unique status?  My own brief period as writer in residence in a hospital corroborates the fact that there is something in the hospital context that does turn people into storytellers, in a way they can never be in the outside world with all its options for entertainment and occupation. 

Mickey’s experience starts to hint at the nature of a vibrant ‘context’ for storytelling.  It shows that its survival is not dependent on peat fires and spindles, but rather on being embedded and necessary in everyday life.  So why have I come to focus on this idea of ‘context’ in my research inquiry, and what do I mean by it? 

 

TWO RINGS OF CONTEXT

Reading theorists of theatre and storytelling indicates that there are two ‘rings’ of context around a performance.  The outer ring is located in the surrounding society or culture. Gersie (1997, p.2-3) emphasises that “economic, educational and cultural differences, with their resultant privilege and power inequities, are realities which permeate any telling situation.”  Thus a performance by a professional storyteller to psychiatric patients is a very different matter to a storytelling circle of amateur enthusiasts who perceive themselves as equals. 

The inner ring consists of the rules and institutions, codes and expectations surrounding an artform, which influence the way the audience engage with it, and indeed how it must be presented (Boal 1971; Rowe 2007).  Bennett (1997, p.112) suggests that audiences can only really engage with a performance “through the codes (they) are accustomed to utilizing”.  Boal (1971, p.177) goes further, by suggesting that any performance art need to conform to a consistent structure, in order to be accessible to all. Within the structure, creativity can be limitless, but, he says, “Previous knowledge is indispensable to full enjoyment.”

Thus, the patients in the psychiatric hospital need to know to what extent they are expected to interact with the storyteller as opposed to simply listening; the storytelling circle in the back room of the pub will only flow satisfyingly if everyone understands the rules of telling by turns, and giving supportive feedback to other tellers.   

What are the implications of this for storytelling with teenagers, a group who very rarely come into contact with it as an artform?  The last four decades have seen a resurgence of storytelling for both adults and children, giving rise to new contexts, codes and expectations.  I want to turn next to five ‘dimensions’ of context within this movement, and explore how adolescents may interact with them, giving examples from my practice and that of others.

 

DIMENSIONS OF CONTEXT FOR STORYTELLING

Virtuosity and professionalism

Performance storytelling for adults has developed to a virtuosic standard in many countries.  In the US, tellers such as Sobol (2008), Harvey (2008) and Radner (2008) have seen the professionalization and diversification of the artform as an essential move away from its naive dependence on traditional tropes such as folktales, reminiscences, and old-fashioned costumes.  In the UK, a debate continues in which some professional tellers see themselves in the tradition of the elite bards of previous eras or other cultures.  They argue that while everyone might be a storyteller, not everyone can deliver an innovative, ambitious, perhaps genre-blurring performance (often of myth) for a demanding contemporary theatre audience.

Yet aspiring to ‘be like theatre’ may not be the best way to engage a teenage audience.  Reason (2006) describes the sense of exclusion and inhibition experienced by teenagers at a theatre performance of Othello, something that prevented them from becoming absorbed in the drama itself.  The very performative style of some storytellers may also alienate self-conscious adolescents at times, particularly in the intimate settings of typical performances and workshops.  In a pilot storytelling project of the ICAN centre, a group of Year 9 (age 14-15) participants felt discomfort with the teller’s ‘full-on’ style – it was just ‘too much’ - even though they admired her and her stories (Reason 2012).

Interaction

Away from the theatrical performance storytelling context, one staple of many ‘jobbing’ storytellers (including myself) has been school-, museum-, or festival-based interactive storytelling aimed at a family audience.  UK tellers typically give informal, intimate renditions of lively folktales, and seek to bring an audience of children and their carers briefly into another world. 

Secondary schools rarely engage storytellers, and teenagers are usually notable by their absence from storytelling in other informal settings.  When they are there, the limitations of this mode of telling sometimes become evident.  Performing at a small festival this summer, I found myself in a yurt, unexpectedly telling to a group including not only young children and parents, but also four teenage boys.  I started to spin my tale of Maori adventurers, inviting the audience to row with me across the ocean, chanting in time with the oars.  The boys rowed – and how they rowed.  They generated enormous waves that sent them and other audience members crashing to the ground.  They parodied the fairies’ wicked baby-stealing and wailed like abandoned infants; they answered every rhetorical question with a smart riposte.  The little children were transfixed by them, my ‘web’ of entrancement was broken, and my cheeks started turning red.  And yet the boys stayed until the end of the performance.  Later in the weekend, they asked me to come and see an intricate ‘fairy theme park’ they had built in the woods, with lookout points for spotting babies to steal. 

Another visual image I often have while telling is of suspending a ball in the air between me and the audience.  The boys would not let me keep it up there where I wanted it.  They wanted to bounce it and play with it – interaction, yes, but not as I knew it. 

Wendy Luttrell (2003), in her ethnography of a pregnant teenagers’ unit in a US high school, marvels at the creativity of her research participants within the ‘transitional space’ of the workshops she ran.  She wonders that educators don’t make more use of this delight in performance and play that many adolescents possess.  At 14, she discovered, most of her research participants found it very difficult to narrate their experiences fluently, but they could enact them eloquently – something which may act as a stepping stone towards articulate storytelling. 

Social embeddedness

Related to the above two ‘dimensions’ is the degree of emphasis, within any given storytelling context, on what Jo Salas (in Fox and Dauber 1999), referring to playback theatre, calls the ‘interactive social’ domain.   She writes that any social or artistic event, from a town meeting to a play rehearsal, shares certain “common criteria for success” (p.21), which must be balanced against artistic criteria:

“These include planning and organisation according to the purpose of the gathering; a congenial and appropriate physical environment; an opportunity early in the proceedings for each person to be seen and heard; an atmosphere of respect; some form of participation or engagement from all present; the acknowledgement and inclusion of diverse concerns, point of view, and feelings; time management; a sense of achievement in relation to the meeting’s intent; and an adequate closure at the end.”

You can refer back to Carmichael’s description of a Highland ceilidh and see that it answers all of these criteria – even time management, in a sense!  These are things that are of concern to people whose stake in a performance event goes beyond that of the ticket-purchasing connoisseur, to the long-term social bonding and wellbeing of their community.  Two examples:

·         Lawrence Millman interviewed many elderly people who recalled storytelling ceilidhs in their youth: ‘It was not the story that was in it,’ one old man told me.  ‘Not the story really at all, but the idea you were passing your time with the others.  ‘Twas like mass, you see, because we went to the chapel for the same reason.” (Millman 1977, pp.78-79)

·         Alida Gersie (1997, p.44) recounts how an international government adviser in one of her storytelling groups told her, with surprise in his voice: “‘I actually tell a lot of stories whilst I play golf.  That’s mostly what we do when we play… I guess you could say that we’re a group of wandering storytellers.’…When asked what made this so clearly important, he replied without much hesitation: ‘To have the space to share experiences.  That’s what you do when you tell stories.  Don’t you agree?’”

It wasn’t about the story; it wasn’t about the golf; they were, in a sense, a means to an end.  Lots of other equally important things were going on at the same time.  The evolution of performance storytelling in the revival can perhaps be seen as an over-emphasis of artistry over the ‘interactive social’ domain; it is very much about the story.  It is also, however, an attempt to reinvent and disseminate a context for storytelling.  Bauman (1986) closely analyses the changing style of a well-known US storyteller, Ed Bell, as he moved from his starting context of his fishing ponds business, where he used to spin yarns for back country fishermen like himself, to the festival stages of the storytelling revival.  The further he got from the intimate, socially embedded setting of the fishponds, the more his style grew larger-than-life, luxuriant, explanatory.  He had to teach the audience things they did not know about how to listen to stories; his telling had to be ‘performative’ in the sense of subtly transforming the audience, showing them a different way of being together as a group. 

How does a teenage audience react when storytellers attempt to transplant them into the social reality of another time and place?  Might the ‘interactive social’ domain need to be rethought for their own needs, so that it isn’t about the story, but the story becomes an essential route to whatever it really is about for them?  I like Jack Zipes’ (1995) formulation that a storyteller can “point a way toward creating a network within a community that brings people together around the concerns they may have…” (p.6).

Ritual

To Salas’ dichotomy of ‘artistic’ and ‘interactive social’ dimensions of playback theatre (and I would argue this applies equally to storytelling), Fox (in Fox and Dauber 1999) adds ‘ritual’ to form a triangle.  The ritual, or rite of passage element of story has, in most cultures, had a special importance for teenagers – you could almost say that most myths are about and for them.  In a more practical sense, storytelling also depends on socially recognised ‘rituals’ of starting a story, gaining the audience’s permission to keep telling, signalling it is over.

Caribbean storytellers are famous for their ‘Crick – CRACK!’; ‘Once upon a time’ does the same in English folk tales.   The equivalents in informal settings, within the youth group or gathered around the dinner table, are more subtle.  My mother-in-law, when moving from ‘normal conversation’ to ‘storytelling’ mode, always says, ‘Jetzt kommt es!’ (Now it’s coming!) – then we know to shut up and listen up.  Yet where there are multiple entertainment options right there in the living room, it feels quite counter-cultural, quite a brave thing to do, to seek to command the generality’s attention in this way.  I have many friends who will pay for tickets to my storytelling performances, but very few brave enough to invite me to tell a story at their Christmas party. 

What elements of ritual need to be reinvented, in order to give teenagers access to storytelling as a social practice?  Nick Rowe (2007) objects to the idea of ritual in playback theatre as embodying canonical content, thus limiting the possibilities open to individual participants in an artform.  However, I am talking here of ritual as encoding process and values, for example, that it is safe to tell and important to lend an empathetic ear.  I am interested to discover whether groups of young people might invent their own codes and rituals of telling.

Instrumentality

Debates over the instrumental relationship between arts and social issues are fraught within all applied arts (e.g. Belfiore and Bennett 2007).  Jack Zipes (1995, pp.2-3) has described a widespread “instrumentalization of the imagination of children” in education.  Within mental health, the use of arts as therapy (as opposed to simply arts in mental health or with mental health service users) can create a more instrumental context and perhaps less equal power relations (Stannage 2013).  

Practice-led research may put a new frame around the question of instrumentality (Nelson 2013) by welcoming forms of knowing beyond the ‘objective’, and within my research I will need to seek sensitive means of evaluating the impacts of storytelling on participants’ wellbeing, empathy and learning, through both ethnographic and artistic approaches.  But the question that concerns me here is rather the participants’ own perceptions of the ‘purpose’ of what they are doing when engaging with storytelling.

Teenagers’ daily experience of education, health and social care systems focused on goals, targets and outcomes can lead them to expect a direct relationship between activities organised for them and some eventual outcome.  They may resist this; for example, when a local drama practitioner was asked to work with a group of secondary pupils to tackle bullying, the young people saw her agenda, refused to play along with it, and she had to change tack and work in a more open-ended way with them.  Alternatively, they may internalise it: in the ICAN pilot project, one group of 14-15-year-old participants took part in storytelling workshops during their scheduled history lessons (Reason 2012).  In a focus group, one comment indicated their perplexity: ‘we’re not going to use it for anything’.  Their expectation of instrumental, external goals (e.g. that the stories would teach them historical facts) was unfulfilled. 

However, I think both cases above also give a sense of the young people’s own conditions for committing their energies and creativities: they perceived the workshops as having come out of the blue – being decontextualized and lacking transparency – and the storyteller as an “alien, who comes from some unknown place” (Zipes 1995, p.7). The middle teens is a period in which young people start to analyse and question the world around them, rather than simply accepting it (Alrutz 2013).  This suggests that for groups of adolescents, much more than for children, a precondition for successful engagement with storytelling will be to spend time co-constructing the context for the work, how it fits into their wider lives, and why we are doing it. 

 

THE ASPIRATION and THE DIRECTIONS

If one of ICAN’s aspirations is to help return storytelling to educators and young people as a normal pastime (Mello 2001; Ryan 2008), part of the texture of everyday life, where can we look for roots of an adolescent ‘context’ for storytelling?  None of these dimensions I have explored provide any answers, but I think they give me some starting points in my long-term practice with groups of teenagers. 

They free me from any obligation to conform to established genres or ‘codes’ around storytelling, and oblige me to ask participants to help me create ones that work for them.  I will look to their love of performance and interactivity, but on their own terms (Luttrell 2003).  I will seek to create safe ‘transitional space’ in which they can play with options for their own identities (Perry and Rogers 2011).  Rather than aim for specific behavioural outcomes, I will need to prize transparency and involve them as both co-researchers and co-creators of the rationale for our work together.  I hope the work will enshrine and disseminate their own unique knowledge, rather than follow the agendas of others. 

In conclusion, I would like to restate that there is nothing antiquated about the art, or craft, of storytelling.  While the casually and necessarily intergenerational  social context in which it was embedded in Carmichael’s time has gone, the basic human needs have not changed.  I am looking forward to finding new ‘rituals of process’ for storytelling with teenagers, and trying to embed these in their everyday environments of school, extracurricular activities and home.  Teenagers will always respond differently to adults or to younger children; they will always want to ‘bounce the ball’; so how can we re-invent the process to celebrate their unique relationship with story?

 

REFERENCES

Alrutz, Megan (2013) ‘Sites of possibility: applied theatre and digital storytelling with youth’.  Research in Drama Education: The Journal of Applied Theatre and Performance 18:1, pp.44-57.

 

Bauman, R. (1986) Context, Performance and Event: contextual studies of oral narrative. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

 

Belfiore, Eleanora and Bennett, Oliver (2007) ‘Determinants of Impact: Towards a Better Understanding of Encounters with the Arts’, Cultural Trends 16:3, pp.225-275

 

Boal, Augusto (2000) Theatre of the Oppressed, 2nd edition. London: Pluto Press

 

Briggs, Katherine M. (1977) British Folk-tales and Legends: A Sampler.  Paladin Books.

 

Fox, Jonathan and Dauber, Heinrich (1999) Gathering Voices: Essays on playback theatre.  New Paltz, NY: Tusitala Publishing.

 

Gersie, Alida (1997) Reflections on Therapeutic Storymaking: the use of stories in groups.  London and Bristol, Pennsylvania: Jessica Kingsley Publishers.

Harvey, Hannah B. (2008) ‘On the Edge of the Storytelling World: The Festival Circuit and the Fringe’. Storytelling, Self, Society 4, pp.134-151

Luttrell, Wendy (2003) Pregnant Bodies, Fertile Minds: Gender, Race, and the Schooling of Pregnant Teens. New York: Routledge

Mello, Robin (2001) ‘Building Bridges: How storytelling influences teacher/student relationships’.  Paper presented at the Storytelling in the Americas conference, St Catherine’s (Ontario), August-Sept 2001

 

Millman, Lawrence (1977) Our Like Will Not Be Here Again: Notes from the West of Ireland. Saint Paul, Minnesota: Ruminator Books.

 

Perry, Mia and Rogers, Theresa (2011) ‘Meddling with ‘drama class’, muddling ‘urban’: imagining aspects of the urban feminine self through an experimental theatre process with youth. RiDE: The Journal of Applied Theatre and Performance 16:2, pp.197-213.

Radner, Jo (2008) ‘On the Threshold of Power: The Storytelling Movement Today’. Storytelling, Self, Society 4, pp.36-49.

Reason, Matthew (2006) ‘Young audiences and live theatre: Young audiences and live theatre, Part 2: Perceptions of liveness in performance’. Studies in Theatre and Performance 26:3, pp.221-241

 

Rowe, Nick (2007) Playing the Other: Dramatizing personal narratives in playback theatre. London and Philadelphia: Jessica Kingsley Publishers.

 

Ryan, Patrick (2008) ‘Narrative Learning / Learning Narratives: Storytelling, experiential learning and education’, Lecture for George Ewart Evans Centre for Storytelling, University of Glamorgan, Thursday, 29 May 2008

 

Sobol, Joseph Daniel (2008) ‘Contemporary Storytelling: Revived Traditional Art and Protean Social Agent’.  Storytelling, Self, Society 4, pp.122-133

 

Stannage, El (2013) ‘Tread softly: ethical considerations in participatory arts research’. Paper to Research Methods Conference, York St John University, 11.11.2013

 

Zipes, Jack (1995) Creative Storytelling: Building community, changing lives. London: Routledge.