Storytelling & Digital-Age Civics: Finding Your Story - 1/14/2014
1 2015-09-28T22:32:37-07:00 Diana Lee 0c994d7f9dc5ee78dc93d8c823c300c060b9c890 610 2 Part 1 of the Storytelling & Digital-Age Civics webinar series plain 2015-09-28T22:35:28-07:00 YouTube 2014-01-14T19:05:20.000Z 4SBkpvQjVC8 TheCLAlliancevideos Diana Lee 0c994d7f9dc5ee78dc93d8c823c300c060b9c890This page is referenced by:
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Storytelling and Digital-Age Civics webinar series
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Launched in January 2014, the Storytelling and Digital-Age Civics webinar series brought together civically active youth, educators, and activists to talk about storytelling as a practice that bridges cultural and civic/political engagement.
Coordinated by Media, Activism, and Participatory Politics (MAPP) in collaboration with Youth Radio, Connected Learning, and USC’s Media Arts + Practice, the series builds on MAPP’s definition of storytelling as a shared activity in which individuals and communities contribute to the telling, retelling, and remixing of narratives through various media channels, such as photography, blogs, books, performance, and videos.
Spread over four weeks and organized around the lifecycle of a story, this webinar series brought together civically active youth to discuss how political narratives are created, produced, spread and recontextualized in digital spaces through “digital afterlife.”
The series was moderated by Derek Williams from Youth Radio, the Peabody Award-winning youth-driven production company headquartered in Oakland, California. The diverse webinar participants represent a broad range of people, groups, and practices, which encouraged fruitful discussions around the affordances and challenges of using digital media for civic action. For more information about the participants in each webinar, visit: “Finding Your Story,” “Making Your Story,” “Spreading Your Story,” and “Considering Your Story’s Afterlife.”
The MAPP team also published highlights from this series on Confessions of an Aca-Fan: The Official Weblog of Henry Jenkins, if you are interested in some of the behind the scenes action or key moments from Webinars 1 & 2 and Webinars 3 & 4. -
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Finding Your Story
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How do you identify and frame stories that engage with your community?
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Finding Your Story was the first webinar of the Storytelling and Digital-Age Civics series, held on January 14, 2014. Host Derek Williams was joined by MAPP team member Sangita Shresthova, Jason Russell (Invisible Children), Carol Zou (Yarnbombing LA), Monica Mendoza (Youthspeaks), Matt Howard (Iraq Veterans Against the War) and Erick Huerta (DREAMers) to explore how to identify and frame stories that engage with community.
The participants discussed the following questions during the webinar:- Walk us through a story you’ve developed that has helped to inform or inspire the work you do. How did you and your collaborators come up with this story? What factors helped you to see its value for your group? What are some of the roles that story has played in promoting your cause?
- How do you define what is or isn’t a story?
- There are always a million ways to communicate your project’s core message. Why did you choose the story or set of stories that you’re betting on the have the greatest impact? What was the impact that you sought?
- How did you identify your target audience and how much does audience matter in your creative process? How did that decision affect the story’s form and substance? How narrowly defined is your target audience--how do you create a personal connection with a broad public about an issue they may not know or care a lot about? (e.g., undocumented immigrants, military veterans)
- In your storytelling, how do you balance showing scale of the problem and having an individual personal narrative people can connect to?
- Is there a recipe for a successful story? What features do the most powerful digital age civics stories share?
- What anticipated critiques did you think about as you framed your story?
- We wanted to have you respond to some key critiques that have been leveled against storytelling as a political tool (let’s take these one at a time): Some argue that activism should be governed by facts and arguments, not stories and that stories do not sustain long-term structural change. How do you respond to these critiques?
Don’t have time to watch the full webinar? The MAPP team also published highlights from this series on Henry Jenkins’ blog, and key moments from Webinars 1 & 2 and Webinars 3 & 4.
Looking for an overview of the series as a whole? MAPP Project Director Sangita Shresthova also published “Learn to Listen. Really Listen: ‘Storytelling and Digital Age Civics’ Series Artists and Activists Share Seven Key Insights” on Digital IS.