Digital Storytelling: Resistive Stories and the “Measurement” of Change

In this paper, I interrogate our understanding of social change in the telling of self-representational digital stories, stories that speak from the perspective of the storyteller and which centre on the “I”. There is a growing audible criticism of the value of these digital stories if distribution...

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Main Author: Thas Angela M. Kuga
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2015-10-01
Series:Cultural Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5334/csci.84
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author Thas Angela M. Kuga
author_facet Thas Angela M. Kuga
author_sort Thas Angela M. Kuga
collection DOAJ
description In this paper, I interrogate our understanding of social change in the telling of self-representational digital stories, stories that speak from the perspective of the storyteller and which centre on the “I”. There is a growing audible criticism of the value of these digital stories if distribution and outreach of such stories do not reach both wider and critical audiences. As a digital storytelling practitioner, I examine these criticisms and draw attention first to our understanding of storytelling, and second to our understanding of audiences within an ancient oral tradition of humankind. There is no doubt that the digital in digital storytelling allows for a global arena of possibilities. However, it is these very same global possibilities within the digital that have possibly forced a cursory value on storytelling by the most important audience among audiences—the marginalised "I" who struggles for political, social and economic attention. The existential self is severely talked down to for not going beyond that one digital story or those few friends and family members. In these instances, that potential to transform “power over” into “power with” and “power within” the storytellers quickly disintegrates. What happens instead is an expansion of the pool of judges of narratives, a predominant and more overt phenomenon in the field of human rights. What form the final narrative takes in any digital storytelling project is often shaped by the interests of these “mediators” who turn “judges of narratives” when they mould and package these stories to be more palatable to their specific audiences and consumption needs. The storyteller's sense of existential peril is in this way prolonged. These untoward developments beg us to ask the question, “what change then are self-representational digital stories meant to bring about?”
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spelling doaj-art-052952d4962848a6b700d1b02cd270f52025-02-10T13:26:38ZengSciendoCultural Science1836-04162015-10-01828910510.5334/csci.8484Digital Storytelling: Resistive Stories and the “Measurement” of ChangeThas Angela M. Kuga0Queensland University of Technology, BrisbaneAustraliaIn this paper, I interrogate our understanding of social change in the telling of self-representational digital stories, stories that speak from the perspective of the storyteller and which centre on the “I”. There is a growing audible criticism of the value of these digital stories if distribution and outreach of such stories do not reach both wider and critical audiences. As a digital storytelling practitioner, I examine these criticisms and draw attention first to our understanding of storytelling, and second to our understanding of audiences within an ancient oral tradition of humankind. There is no doubt that the digital in digital storytelling allows for a global arena of possibilities. However, it is these very same global possibilities within the digital that have possibly forced a cursory value on storytelling by the most important audience among audiences—the marginalised "I" who struggles for political, social and economic attention. The existential self is severely talked down to for not going beyond that one digital story or those few friends and family members. In these instances, that potential to transform “power over” into “power with” and “power within” the storytellers quickly disintegrates. What happens instead is an expansion of the pool of judges of narratives, a predominant and more overt phenomenon in the field of human rights. What form the final narrative takes in any digital storytelling project is often shaped by the interests of these “mediators” who turn “judges of narratives” when they mould and package these stories to be more palatable to their specific audiences and consumption needs. The storyteller's sense of existential peril is in this way prolonged. These untoward developments beg us to ask the question, “what change then are self-representational digital stories meant to bring about?”https://doi.org/10.5334/csci.84digital storytellingsocial changemalaysiasexual minorityexistentialismlgbtresistive storiesresistancesocial justice
spellingShingle Thas Angela M. Kuga
Digital Storytelling: Resistive Stories and the “Measurement” of Change
Cultural Science
digital storytelling
social change
malaysia
sexual minority
existentialism
lgbt
resistive stories
resistance
social justice
title Digital Storytelling: Resistive Stories and the “Measurement” of Change
title_full Digital Storytelling: Resistive Stories and the “Measurement” of Change
title_fullStr Digital Storytelling: Resistive Stories and the “Measurement” of Change
title_full_unstemmed Digital Storytelling: Resistive Stories and the “Measurement” of Change
title_short Digital Storytelling: Resistive Stories and the “Measurement” of Change
title_sort digital storytelling resistive stories and the measurement of change
topic digital storytelling
social change
malaysia
sexual minority
existentialism
lgbt
resistive stories
resistance
social justice
url https://doi.org/10.5334/csci.84
work_keys_str_mv AT thasangelamkuga digitalstorytellingresistivestoriesandthemeasurementofchange