Parabola and Storytelling
September/October 1997
Utne Reader
Though every work of literature tells some kind of story, (even if
it's only a chronicle of what's happening in a writer's head),
story itself is a stream far older, wider, and deeper than
literature. Literary journals in which stories--short stories--can
be found are more numerous than the sands of the seashore, but
publications that look at the oral tradition and other non-literary
streams of storytelling are rarer. After ruling out the various dry
academic folklore journals, I've found two notable publications
that explore the roots of story with style.
RELATED CONTENT
The first is the always-admirable Parabola, a quarterly
compendium of spiritual and other kinds of traditional knowledge
whose every issue is organized around a single theme: The Soul,
Peace, Play and Work, or (the most recent issue) Ways of Knowing.
These are big themes, and Parabola treats them in the grand
manner--not with service-oriented articles on how to bring Zen or
Sufism directly to bear upon your life but calm, gracefully
highbrow discussions of spiritual principles from many cultures, in
their own terms. Parabola is never academic (its articles
are short, and illustrations are frequent), but its editors
obviously believe that the great spiritual traditions should be
presented with a dignified deliberateness that doesn't so much
reach out to a reader as invite him or her to an intellectual
feast.
Interspersed between essays like 'The Heart of Man and the Heart
of Christianity' and 'The Awakening of Primal Knowledge' are
traditional tales from various cultures. The 'Ways of Knowing'
issue, for instance, offers a Turkish story about a wise child, an
Iranian tale about a trickster, a pan-Islamic story of a prophet
who tried to learn what only God knows (the hour of his death), and
a Mongolian folktale about a hunter who saved the life of the
Dragon King's daughter and was rewarded with special knowledge.
These stories, always gracefully translated, are offered without
comment. They transform each issue's theme into timeless lessons
that dispense wisdom the way teachers in traditional cultures
always do: by suggestion. The stories, and all of Parabola, appeal
primarily to spiritual seekers who do not need to be led by the
hand.
The businesslike Storytelling magazine is in many ways
the polar opposite of Parabola. Published by the National
Storytelling Association in Jonesborough, Tennessee, it's
essentially a trade magazine for the thousands of professional
storytellers who perform in schools, in libraries, and on the
storytelling-festival circuit across America. The Storymatters
section in the front of the magazine is full of trade news and
trends: Nashville storyteller teams up with a string quartet; a
narrative artist in Wyoming gets her own radio show. There are
how-to pieces in the main part of the magazine, from which
talespinners in the trenches can learn how to integrate music into
their routines, how schoolteachers can use the oral tradition to
help kids learn to read, and other nuts-and-bolts matters. What I
didn't see, at least in the issues I examined, were articles that
took on controversial questions. There's nothing here about whether
storytellers are primarily entertainers or wisdom-keepers, about
the rights and wrongs of whites retellling Native or
African-American tales, or about other ethical dilemmas.
Storytelling's main purpose appears to be to help build, and
cheerlead for, an emerging profession, rather than act as its
conscience.