One of the really interesting things when you start to deal with fragmented narrative (of which blogs are a subset) is the realisation that you are returning to an older oral tradition in which stories evolved in their retelling. In the western tradition by allowing Andersen and the Brothers Grim to formalise our stories we froze them at a point in time and terminated their evolution. They are of course strong stories so the remerge all the time in novels and films, but the oral tradition faded.
In part that was because we no longer lived in environments where telling stories was the only form of entertainment and knowledge transfer. I grew up with radio and conversation before the television arrived at the age of 11 (I am not so old, but my parents resisted getting one for years). That increased social isolation and one to many communication. With the growth of the blogosphere we return to many-to-many interactions, and as those interactions increase in a virtual world patterns emerge and stabilise. Our community is no longer the extended family around the camp fire, it is anyone with access to a computer.
Its no surprise that the forms of the oral tradition tend to re-emerge in this space. I am looking forward to returning to South Africa in a few weeks time to run an accreditation programme and do some other work. Africa has never forgotten the oral tradition, and the growth of scalable computing allows a new way of working, which is not constrained by the codification and process strategies of anglo-saxon thinking.
Comments (2)
Dave,
I believe you'll shortly be giving an accreditation course in Canberra Australia. Worth noting that the indigenous people of Australia have the oldest known continuous tradition of oral knowledge transfer, established around 40,000 years ago. It has a number of forms, but central to it is "the Dreaming".
See you in March!
Kind regards,
Dean
Posted by Dean A Coulter | February 20, 2008 3:58 AM
Posted on February 20, 2008 03:58
Hi Dave,
Thank you some interesting days at the accreditation course in Copenhagen last month. Lots of valuable insight but ...
When it comes to the Brothers Grimm you are right about terminating an oral tradition, but the fairytales of Hans Christian Andersen is for the wast majority as original work as any other author. A few of his fairytales are inspired by oral tradition, but do not blame him stopping oral tradition.
If you do that any author should be blamed, and there is no reason for that. They contribute ....
Kind regards, Søren
Posted by Søren Raaschou | March 18, 2008 10:26 PM
Posted on March 18, 2008 22:26