What Is a Story?
As homework for another class, a student asked me to give her my definition of a story. I didn't pull out any narrative theory books to refine it, and I didn't try to put any special cybertextual spin on it, which I would have done if I'd spent more time thinking about it. Anyway, here's here's what I came up with.
A story is acasuallycausally-connected sequence of events that focus on a central character's moral choices, or that present for the reader's judgment the central character's obligation to respond to events outside of the character's control, or that expect the reader to make a moral judgment responding to the character's actions. I don't mean that a story has to be preachy, just that the events described have to be significant enough that we can see a change in the central character (or that we see the central character choosing not to change, which is, of course a moral choice).I'd say that the same story (such as Cinderella, or The Prodigal Son) can be presented in verse, prose, on stage, in a painting, etc., but that any one particular telling of the story (such as the Egyptian version of Cinderella, or the Disney Cinderella, or Sesame Street's CinderElmo) shouldn't be confused with the core elements that make up the essence of the story (the fact that you need a lowly person, the magical intervention, the person in a high position falling in love with the transformed lowly person, the clue left at the separation, the search, and the searcher's acceptance of the transformed person's true identity).
2 Comments
Leave a comment
Recent Related Entries
Guarded Optimism for the Future of ReadingNaturally, as an English professor, I've got a vested interest in the future of reading. But you can't have an intellectually healthy society without literacy. I had a high school physics teacher -- Admiral Peebles (a retired nuclear submarine expert)...
Global Warming: A Tale of Two Writers
While the Church gets a lot of guff for its skeptical responses to Galileo's astronomical findings, some Jesuit astronomers not only listened to his ideas but repeated his observations, and some university faculty members flatly refused to look through a...
Humanities Resource Center Online
The American Academy of Arts and Sciences has released a major study that aims to establish benchmarks for assessing the humanities. Assessment was one of the major issues that arose during last year's English program review, so this is worth...
The story of a literary hoax; or, how Elizabeth Pepys came to be quoted on "turds that do fly"
A wonderful post by Whitney Anne Trettien, who examines the reception of a feminist spoof of Pepys famous diary, in order to explore the strange human desire to trust those who reveal shameful private failures. (That is, unless her whole...
Proving the Benefits of Peer Instruction
Another article that's on my mind as I consider how to integrate group work into an unusually large literature class. In an undergraduate genetics course, students were, on 16 occasions during the course of a semester, asked a pair of...

In sentence 1, do you mean "casually" or "causally"?
Good catch -- that should be "causally".