Burning Brightly: New Light on Old Tales Told Today

Front Cover
Broadview Press, Jun 15, 1998 - Fiction - 304 pages

Burning Brightly is the first full-length book treatment of professional storytelling in North America today. For some years there has been a major storytelling revival throughout the continent, with hundreds of local groups and centres springing up, and with storytelling becoming an important part of the professional training for librarians.

In the book, Stone explores storytelling through storytellers themselves, while providing enlightening commentary from her own background as a storyteller. Included in her analysis are informative discussions of organized storytelling communities, individual tellers, and tales. Issues such as the modern recontextualization of old tales and the role of women in folktales are linked to individual storytelling accounts. Texts of eight stories that exemplify the approaches of the various storytellers are also included.

Burning Brightly will be compelling reading for storytellers—and for everyone who loves storytelling.

 

Contents

Folktales and Organized Storytelling
3
Intentional Storytelling Communities
33
Once Upon a Time Today Tellers and Tales 57
57
Social Identity in Organized Storytelling
79
INDIVIDUAL TELLERS AND TALES
95
The Honest Penny Bob Barton
110
The Teller in the Tale
141
Difficult Women in Folktales
177
Burning Brightly The Development of a Story
219
The Wedding Feast
239
Four Streams in the Toronto Festival
251
Bibliography
259
Acknowledgements
269
Copyright

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Page 259 - Tell me Another: Storytelling and Reading Aloud at Home, at School and in the Community.

About the author (1998)

Kay Stone is a widely-published professor of folklore at the University of Winnipeg, and an established storyteller.

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