Why Do We Need Stories?

 


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A lot has been written on the topic of “Why We Need Stories,” and after reviewing a goodly chunk of the literature out there, I think I can add something new on the subject. First, let’s back up a second and examine the question: Do we really “need” stories?


Sure, stories are fun, but is that all they are? Well, the nonscientific answer to that is that stories have been getting told around campfires and passed down from generation to generation for as long as we’ve had language⎯suggesting that from the very beginning stories have played a vital role in our social commerce. Clearly in the past, stories fulfilled a definite “need”⎯the oral transmission of information, history, wisdom, and knowledge.


The scientific answer as to whether we “need” stories⎯an answer that has been proved exhaustively by experimentation time and again⎯is that our human ability to grasp and retain information is far better facilitated by listening to stories than by studying bullet points, graphs, and textbooks. For example, The Watson Selection Test⎯an important logic puzzle used in the study of deductive reasoning⎯can be solved by fewer than 10% of people when tackled as a logic problem, but by 70 – 90% of people when presented as a story involving the detection of social-rule cheating. Stories engage our entire brains, not simply the cerebral centers (Broca’s area and Wernicke’s area, for those who care) that are involved in reasoning. Stories just work better. It’s the way our brains are built.


There’s more, but to explore the scientific approach further would be boring (unlike listening to a story), so I’ll cut to the chase: The takeaway from all the scientific experimentation and whatnot is this: If you want to reach people⎯if you want to engage them, educate them, move them⎯tell them a story.


In the past it was generally accepted that our use of language was our defining human attribute. Now that we are discovering other species on our planet with previously unsuspected communication skills, it is currently being proposed that the true and defining attribute of humans is our ability to tell stories, and through our stories to pass on the accumulated knowledge and wisdom of our species. Storytelling may turn out to be the most human art of all.


So do we still need stories? The answer, at least for most of our human existence, has been a resounding “Yes!” For one, in the past stories gave us an immeasurable evolutionary edge over the competition (Your great-great-grandfather ate some of those funny-looking mushrooms over there and got sick and died). For another, the power of our sacred stories to unite and galvanize entire peoples (the Holy Bible, the Qur’an, the I Ching, the Book of Mormon, and The Bhagavad-Gita, to name a few) is undeniable. Stories have illuminated and entertained, wreaked havoc and righted wrongs, shown us the consequences of our actions, and carried messages across the centuries. Stories have been an instrument of change, transcending space and time, allowing us to walk in another’s shoes and experience emotions without paying the full price of those feelings. Stories tell us where we’ve been; stories tell us where we’re going; stories tell us who we are. Stories tell us how to be human.


Powerful stuff.


But things have changed. Does the power of stories still hold in our modern age? For most of our time on Earth, storytelling has been an oral tradition. Since the advent of the printing press, film and TV, and the internet as “story delivery systems,” stories have morphed into countless new and exciting forms. People no longer need to be in the presence of a storyteller; that bond has been forever broken. You can now read a story in the solitude of your bedroom, you can sit in a darkened theater and watch a story played out onscreen, you can jam in your earbuds and listen to a story narration long after the storyteller is just a distant memory.


No one knows what the future will bring for the art of storytelling, but one thing is certain. Stories and all the forms they now take will continue to change. Nevertheless, despite present changes and those to come, I believe that at its heart, in its truest incarnation, the essence and power of storytelling will endure. So if you want to reach people⎯if you want to engage them, educate them, move them⎯tell them a story.


What do you think about the power of stories? Have any stories you’ve read (or seen or heard) had an impact on the way you view the world? If you’r a writer, what are the goals of your work? Please leave a comment (click here) and join the conversation!

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Published on May 25, 2015 18:24
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message 1: by Margaret (new)

Margaret Bravo!


message 2: by Steve (new)

Steve Gannon Hi, Margaret -- Thanks!


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