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2023-10-19 -Short Attention Span Theater-
Wonderworks - Story Thinking, The New Science of Narrative Intelligence
[Angus Fletcher] Story Thinking

Amazon - This "fascinating" (Malcolm Gladwell, New York Times bestselling author of Outliers) examination of literary inventions through the ages, from ancient Mesopotamia to Elena Ferrante, shows how writers have created technical breakthroughs—rivaling scientific inventions—and engineering enhancements to the human heart and mind.

Literature is a technology like any other. And the writers we revere—from Homer, Shakespeare, Austen, and others—each made a unique technical breakthrough that can be viewed as both a narrative and neuroscientific advancement. Literature’s great invention was to address problems we could not solve: not how to start a fire or build a boat, but how to live and love; how to maintain courage in the face of death; how to account for the fact that we exist at all.

Wonderworks reviews the blueprints for twenty-five of the most significant developments in the history of literature. These inventions can be scientifically shown to alleviate grief, trauma, loneliness, anxiety, numbness, depression, pessimism, and ennui, while sparking creativity, courage, love, empathy, hope, joy, and positive change. They can be found throughout literature—from ancient Chinese lyrics to Shakespeare’s plays, poetry to nursery rhymes and fairy tales, and crime novels to slave narratives.

A "refreshing and remarkable" (Jay Parini, author of Borges and Me: An Encounter) exploration of the new literary field of story science, Wonderworks teaches you everything you wish you learned in your English class, and "contains many instances of critical insight....What’s most interesting about this compendium is its understanding of imaginative representation as a technology" (The New York Times).
Posted by Besoeker 2023-10-19 06:39|| || Front Page|| [23 views ]  Top

#1 Why is it that the works of the many authors supported in academe are so damned boring? Eliot, Joyce, Faulkner, Wolfe, every damned French and Italian novelist, etc., etc., etc.
Posted by Jerens Black9355 2023-10-19 08:20||   2023-10-19 08:20|| Front Page Top

#2 World divvied into people who get Burroughs / Faulkner / Joyce and then all the rest of y'all.

Read Gravity's Rainbow and Infinite Jest. See some Samuel Beckett and David Mamet plays if you can.
Posted by M. Murcek  2023-10-19 08:24||   2023-10-19 08:24|| Front Page Top

#3 /\ That's gonna leave an ungly bruise Merc....
Whahhahahaha
Posted by Besoeker 2023-10-19 08:28||   2023-10-19 08:28|| Front Page Top

#4 #2 I get Burroughs
Posted by Grom the Reflective 2023-10-19 08:33||   2023-10-19 08:33|| Front Page Top

#5 Allegedly, Roy Scheider told his agent he'd fire him if the guy couldn't get him the part of Dr. Benway in the Naked Lunch movie. He got the role. Peter Weller as Bill Lee.

Worth a look.
Posted by M. Murcek 2023-10-19 08:43||   2023-10-19 08:43|| Front Page Top

#6 #4, I assume you are being ironic. I'm talking William S Burroughs, II..
Posted by M. Murcek 2023-10-19 08:44||   2023-10-19 08:44|| Front Page Top

#7 And, yeah, À la recherche du temps perdu is not light reading. But worth the trouble.
Posted by M. Murcek 2023-10-19 08:47||   2023-10-19 08:47|| Front Page Top

#8 People say it's pretentious to bring up those authors and titles, but, as Satchel Paige said, "It ani't showin' off - if you can do it."
Posted by M. Murcek 2023-10-19 08:58||   2023-10-19 08:58|| Front Page Top

#9 You are allowed to not like (or understand) Cormac McCarthy, but you are not allowed to say he couldn't write.
Posted by M. Murcek 2023-10-19 08:59||   2023-10-19 08:59|| Front Page Top

#10 And. Anyone commenting on the Russia-Ukraine war posts who doesn't get Tolstoy / Solzhenitsyn / Bulgakov / Chekov / Pasternak better just stop.
Posted by M. Murcek 2023-10-19 09:04||   2023-10-19 09:04|| Front Page Top

#11 Meanwhile, to circle back to the actual original post, Gladwell has made a fortune mis-stating actual smart people's ideas while TED talk addicts drool over him.
Posted by M. Murcek 2023-10-19 09:30||   2023-10-19 09:30|| Front Page Top

#12 Literature, like art, if it doesn't touch your inner being, then it isn't "great". Saying it is, just puts off those that can't feel it. Zane Gray, E.R. Burroughs is great for those who can feel it. Just as Dali and Picasso. Pushing your opinion on others is disgusting. Share it if they ask but don't bully them.
Posted by AlmostAnonymous5839 2023-10-19 10:31||   2023-10-19 10:31|| Front Page Top

#13 #6 I didn't.
Posted by Grom the Reflective 2023-10-19 10:38||   2023-10-19 10:38|| Front Page Top

#14 Yeah. Own up to liking them Sax Rohmer books.
Posted by M. Murcek 2023-10-19 10:40||   2023-10-19 10:40|| Front Page Top

#15 If you want to read good, true to the era "rayciss cause that's how it was back then" literature, get into James Ellroy.
Posted by M. Murcek 2023-10-19 10:42||   2023-10-19 10:42|| Front Page Top

#16 #12 - Good art pushes very universal psychological buttons. "Art" tailored to a narrow audience is more appropriately labelled "commercial product."

See: Mozart, et al vs Taylor Swift.
Posted by M. Murcek 2023-10-19 10:48||   2023-10-19 10:48|| Front Page Top

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