Storytelling is a basic and powerful form of communicating. Narrative is how humans have always shared information because it includes context and emotion. Stories are cognitively linear so they can describe a path of events with a goal, a conflict, and the promise of resolution. This doesn’t mean that stories can’t be constructed in a nonlinear environment. They can; that’s part of the excitement about using the tools of a transmedia world to assemble the story. But the linear link is what provides coherency so that the parts fit together, whether it’s backstory or clues to unravel mysteries in the main story arc.
Stories are how the brain communicates. Human brains are hardwired to look for patterns and causality. It’s how we discriminate between a tiger and a tree. Once the brain identifies a pattern, such as a ‘tall thing with leaves’ or ‘striped animal with big teeth,’ it has to make a split second judgment as to whether the detected information is something safe or dangerous so we can react. In other words, the brain uses the pattern-finding information to match against existing experiences — the ‘story’ of sensory information that links events and information together — in order to trigger the emotional and behavioral responses that increase our probability of survival.
The more emotion involved in the experience, the more we pay attention and the better we remember it. Emotion, both positive and negative, was a signal of importance to our survival: “the last time I saw a tiger it ate the antelope…therefore, I will run” or “I really love this baby, therefore I will take care of it.”
Controlling our environment was a sure way to survive. This is why humans are curious. In a modern world, curiosity doesn’t always have such a directly apparent relationship with survival. However, it is still true that the more we know, the better we can predict and the more we have certainty, the more cognitively comfortable we are. Mastering challenges, overcoming the unknown, and conquering uncertainty were essential elements of survival on the Savannah. They still feel really good today. The fact that we’re wandering around in cyberspace doesn’t diminish the human drive to find things out and conquer uncertainty, or the primordial (or neural) pleasure in doing so. It’s just what we do.
Stories are games without points or scores. They engage us because they trigger our curiosity, for example, how many bad movies have you watched to see how they end? A good story, however, gives us authentic emotion and a universality that allows us to connect in a multisensory way. A good story transports us into a new experience. A good story creates personal growth.
Transmedia storytellers have the full pallet of media at their disposal to construct a story within a rich fabric of experience. The wealth of media technologies allows for the integration of interactive and sharable qualities. The result when done well is a story that moves across media and transcends on and offline space. This is only possible because technology has moved the locus of control to the players. The stories only move across media and across time and space when the audience decides to carry it. Transmedia storytelling creates a collaborative and immersive environment that is new, engaging, and exciting…and participation-dependent. Aspiring transmedia producers need to remember that the created environment, for all the available technological intricacies and opportunities, is only as effective as the story it is built on. At the end of the day, transmedia or monomedia, it the story that counts.
Note: This is why I’m excited about the StoryWorld conference in San Francisco October 31-November 2, 2011. It’s a chance see how professionals from different industries are using the power of story in a transmedia world.
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Cross-posted on PsychologyToday.com Positively Media