Today’s pod is coming to you from the messy middle of something I’ve been mulling over for a long time. Something I don’t have a tagline for yet, but that still feels worth sharing, in all its in-process, still-forming glory.
If there’s anything I believe in, it’s the power and necessity of creative expression. But I’m going to be talking this month about the limitations of story – the ways that turning our life experiences into stories can maybe keep us from actually living what we experience.
One way to think about the role of storytelling is that stories are maps – ways of navigating the stuff of life. And as maps, stories are representations of something bigger and deeper than any single narrative can encompass.
Or, to borrow a commonly used phrase: The map is not the territory.
This feels pretty self-evident… until you realize how deeply story maps are ingrained into the way you think about how your life is supposed to happen, and what kind of meaning you’re supposed to make out of what happens.
This month, let’s get real about navigating with story maps (and when it might be time to get a bit lost instead).
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Episode links:
Marisa Goudy, KnotWork Storytelling: A Story About Getting Unstoried | S5 Ep12
Feminist takes on the Hero’s Journey model
- Ursula K. Le Guin, “The Carrier Bag Theory of Fiction”
- The Heroine Journeys Project, a website that includes summaries of some of the major feminist responses to Joseph Campbell’s theory
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