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  2. Storytelling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Storytelling

    For example, digital storytelling, online and dice-and-paper-based role-playing games. In traditional role-playing games, storytelling is done by the person who controls the environment and the non-playing fictional characters, and moves the story elements along for the players as they interact with the storyteller. The game is advanced by ...

  3. Oral storytelling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oral_storytelling

    An Indian traditional oral storyteller Dastangoi artist reciting the "Dastan" Early storytelling probably originated in simple chants. [4] For example, people may have sang chants as they worked at grinding corn or sharpening tools. Our early ancestors created myths to explain natural occurrences.

  4. Oral tradition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oral_tradition

    A traditional Kyrgyz manaschi performing part of the Epic of Manas at a yurt camp in Karakol. Oral tradition, or oral lore, is a form of human communication in which knowledge, art, ideas and culture are received, preserved, and transmitted orally from one generation to another.

  5. Indigenous storytelling in North America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigenous_Storytelling_in...

    Storytelling falls under the umbrella of broader oral traditions and can take either the form of oral history or oral tradition. [9] The difference between the two is that oral history tells the stories that occurred in the teller's own life while oral traditions are passed down through generations and reflect histories beyond the living memory of the tribal members. [9]

  6. Narrative inquiry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narrative_inquiry

    Narrative is a powerful tool in the transfer, or sharing, of knowledge, one that is bound to cognitive issues of memory, constructed memory, and perceived memory. Jerome Bruner discusses this issue in his 1990 book, Acts of Meaning, where he considers the narrative form as a non-neutral rhetorical account that aims at "illocutionary intentions", or the desire to communicate meaning. [10]

  7. Narrative - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narrative

    In Storytelling Rights: The uses of oral and written texts by urban adolescents, author Amy Shuman offers the following definition of storytelling rights: "the important and precarious relationship between narrative and event and, specifically, between the participants in an event and the reporters who claim the right to talk about what happened."

  8. The Seven Basic Plots - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Seven_Basic_Plots

    The contrasting three, where only the third has positive value, for example, The Three Little Pigs, two of whose houses are blown down by the Big Bad Wolf. The final or dialectical form of three, where, as with Goldilocks and her bowls of porridge, the first is wrong in one way, the second in an opposite way, and the third is "just right".

  9. Narratology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narratology

    Narratology is the study of narrative and narrative structure and the ways that these affect human perception. [1] The term is an anglicisation of French narratologie, coined by Tzvetan Todorov (Grammaire du Décaméron, 1969). [2]