What is Story?
Story is a
particular kind of narrative that produces a particular kind of pleasure in the
listener or reader. Aristotle listed its essential components over 2000 years
ago: an interesting character with weaknesses and strengths confronts a problem
that tests the character's ability to recognize and overcome his limitations,
and his efforts to do so create new problems. If he fails, it's a tragedy; if
he succeeds, it's a eucatastrophe. In either case, the ending feels
"just" to the listener/reader, in terms of the character's own
qualities or lack of them...it is the character and the character's actions
(not mere coincidence or divine intervention) that brings about the final
result.
The pleasure
listeners/readers receive comes from the tickling of some of our hard-wiring in
the brain. First, the "interesting character" engages our innate
interest in people--most of us are endlessly curious about at least some of our
acquaintances. We want to know what they're doing and why they're doing it. We
make up our own narratives about them, about their motivations. In a story,
we're allowed inside someone else's head, to see things from their perspective.
Second, we have an innate sense of justice, and the intellectual capacity to
connect action and consequence. The outcome of Story satisfies both the ethical
sense of justice, and the intellectual grasp of causality. Third, we have an
innate interest in the unexpected--in surprises--and a well-constructed Story
provides them in both characterization and action, in order to produce that
desirable combination of pleasures at the end.
Some people thinking
Story is "mere entertainment" and that fiction, properly, should be
"more than just entertainment." They don't think readers/listeners
should be entertained. They devalue Story and would uncouple character and
incident from the plot structure of Story. I think they're wrong...because
Story contains more than "mere" entertainment along with a
satisfaction that nothing else can provide. Because Story, by its nature (and
our nature) is not boring--entertains the reader/listener--it can carry--does
carry--other things along with it. It is a way of experiencing the other
(place, time, person) and making sense of it; it is a way of asking questions
and suggesting answers but leaving the reader/listener free to keep asking,
keep thinking, keep feeling.
M.H
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