Mary Medlicott, Storyteller and Author - Storyworks

Archive for the ‘Telling and Writing’ Category

Storytelling Starters ~ Reflections on Telling and Writing 3

Saturday, March 24th, 2012
Stop Press:
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Reflecting on sound:

After attending two wonderful concerts over the last couple of weeks, I’ve been reflecting on the power of sound. (Reflections again!) One of the concerts was Claudia Aurora, a Portuguese fado singer. The other was Tord Gustavsen, the Norwegian jazz pianist, with his amazing ensemble of saxophonist, drummer and double-bass player. Both concerts had great intensity of feeling and a powerful and associated sense of the musicians listening deeply to the sounds they were making.

Music has led me to thinking this week about the power – or should I say powers – of language.

Reflecting on language:

The varying powers of language come very much to the fore when you’re thinking about telling and writing. In last week’s blog I suggested that telling is often much more informal. It’s perfectly possible to recount a story to audiences of adults or children just in the same way you’d tell it to friends over supper.

Yet at its best, telling a story also means paying attention to the kind of language you’re choosing. So you want it to be informal? That’s fine. Formal or casual, using the present tense or the past tense, there are always choices to be made. (more…)

Storytelling Starters ~ Reflections on Telling and Writing 2

Saturday, March 17th, 2012

It’s frog time. During the week, I saw several in the garden – one in a bucket of water and one in an empty pot right next to the kitchen door. (I hope you like my portraits of them below.)

More frogs!

One evening during the week, another frog was spotted sitting on its haunches in our study, looking for all the world as if it wanted to talk. When and how it got into the study we had no idea. It was me who was deputed to be the one to remove it. So I performed the usual trick of fetching a plastic bowl, popping it suddenly over the frog, then sliding a piece of card underneath, thus temporarily trapping the frog inside. Out in the garden, it hopped quickly away.

Next day my email inbox included a message from the artist who runs the Drawing Club in my local park. This week’s session, she announced, would be at the pond where we could have fun drawing the frogs: ‘Always the best session of the year!’

So frogs became the theme of my week. (more…)

Storytelling Starters ~ Reflections on Telling and Writing

Saturday, March 10th, 2012

I’ve been thinking a lot of late about the differences between telling and writing. Specifically I’ve been thinking about them in connection with personal tales. Here are some of my reflections – with a photo of some reflections to suit!

Personal tales

In storytelling, personal tales can play various different parts. They can be told in storytelling workshops where all kinds of ‘exercises’ can be based on them. They can be told in performance, perhaps as a kind of preamble to a bigger fictional tale. In Chinese storytelling traditions, I’ve read, this is a common technique.

But personal tales can also be told for their own sake and, in my recent thoughts about them, I’ve been considering some of the features that make them work in the telling. One way I decided to explore this was by consciously writing down some of the personal tales that I commonly tell either in my work or in personal life. I know this may seem very odd. Why bother to write down tales I normally tell, perhaps in conversation, sometimes in the course of a storytelling session? Well, doing so has made me newly aware of some of the distinguishing qualities of the spoken tale and how these have to change when you’re writing things down. Conversely, it has also made me understand from the opposite perspective what the storyteller has to learn to do when unpicking a written tale to make it work for a telling. (more…)