How Neuroscientist Michael Grybko Defines Storytelling

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Episode
18 of 438
Længde
35M
Sprog
Engelsk
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Have you ever wondered why storytelling is such an omnipresent theme of human life? Welcome to another guest segment of “The Writer s Brain” where I pick the brain of a neuroscientist about elements of great writing. Research scientist Michael Grybko — of the Department of Psychology at the University of Washington — returned to the podcast to help me define storytelling from a scientific standpoint. If you missed the first two installments of The Writer s Brain — on How Neuroscience Defines both Creativity and Empathy — you can find them in the show notes as well as on writerfiles.fm and iTunes. In this file Michael Grybko and I discuss:

Why Storytelling is the Default Mode of Human Communication

How Empathy Makes Storytelling Such an Effective Tool

Why Hollywood Continually Taps into ‘The Hero’s Journey’

How Blueprints Help Writers Connect with Their Audience

Why Reading Fiction Makes Us More Empathetic

Writers’ Addiction to Stories (Especially the Dark Ones)

Where Humanity Would Be Without Storytelling

The Show Notes

How Neuroscientist Michael Grybko Defines Creativity

How Neuroscientist Michael Grybko Defines Empathy

The Hero with a Thousand Faces (The Collected Works of Joseph Campbell)

Story: Substance, Structure, Style and the Principles of Screenwriting by Robert McKee

“Reading literary fiction improves empathy, study finds” from The Guardian

The Storytelling Animal: How Stories Make Us Human by Jonathan Gottschall

Kelton Reid on Twitter

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