Why Fiction Is Good for You

Similar documents
inds Reading fiction can strengthen your social ties and even change your personality

How to Write a Novel Part 1: Plan & Outline

Chapter 4 Summary Working with Dramatic Elements

CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION. Literature is identical with the words: the expression of human feeling,

Creating a Digital Picture Book

CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION. Everyone has a story, a story which is about true life and even imagination

The world of fiction, dreams, and research: How literature works its spell

Hispanic/Latino Curriculum Twelfth Grade Language Arts Lesson Plan Jorge Louis Borges

Applying to Graduate School in English

Author. I m an Author! Are you? Maybe you enjoy writing down your feelings, or describing things you notice about your world.

Power of Campbell: His approach to storytelling still inspires filmmakers

Essay Writing Workshop The Dos and Don ts of Essay Writing.

English Topics in Creative Writing: Writing Screenplays

Digital Media and Legal Narrative, Three Teaching Ideas: Non linearity Memes Emergence

Henry Hughes Interview 2017

Now that you have achieved your Bronze Award, where you could pick any book you wanted, it s time to broaden your horizons!

Are you, or do you wish to be, a published writing professional?

Uploading and Consciousness by David Chalmers Excerpted from The Singularity: A Philosophical Analysis (2010)

Dr. Coffman, ENG IV DE/H


Back to the English. Please Your Senses The Age-Old Debate: Books vs. Movies

STEP NINE: DESTINY EVERY PATTERN HAS ITS DESTINY; CHOOSE THE ONE YOU WANT

ACT PREPARTION ROY HIGH SCHOOL MRS. HARTNETT

What To Look For When Revising

Getting to Know Characters

The Deliberate Creative Podcast with Amy Climer Transcript for Episode #006: Creative Problem Solving Stage 3 - Develop

Student name: Class: Date:

Learning Progression for Narrative Writing

COMPARING LITERARY AND POPULAR GENRE FICTION

Self-Esteem and the Success of Your Book

English 12 August 2000 Provincial Examination

Master of Creative Writing for Scriptwriters

NAME: #: READING WORKSHOP WHAT DO I DO WHEN I FINISH A BOOK? CONFERENCE FORMS FOR FICTION AND NON-FICTION BOOKS

pace and genre from Nancy Kress author of Beginnngs, Middles, & Ends Pace Yourself

Activity One - Famous Authors

July :00-12:00 12:30-3:30 9:00-12:00 12:30-3:30 9:00-3:30 9:00-12:00 12:30-3:30 9:00-12:00 12:30-3:30. Discovering Genres Instructor: Annette K.

How to Write with Confidence. Dr Jillian Schedneck Writing Centre Coordinator

6. Describe the most memorable event or holiday in your life. 80. What is the most memorable social event in your country?

Major Works Data Sheet

Craft Your Vision Worksheet

! Grade 3 Prompt Genre Notes


Personal Narrative Essay Assignment

Lecture 3: Narrative Form. Professor Michael Green

Intro. to Short Stories & Review of Literary Elements. Mrs. Lima English 9 Honors

A Common Ground: Save the Trees. for instance, is quick to turn a blind eye to the dangers of chopping trees in order to build

Literary Genres Walsh Publishing Co. 2009

Independent Novel Study

Contents. Arts and Leisure. Culture and History. Environment. Health. Science Facts. People Profiles. Social Science. Sports and Hobbies.

Intros and background on Kyle..

Parts of a Short Story: Literary Devices E N G L I S H I

FICTION: Understanding the Text

Mindfulness: The Impact of Being Here Now

Teaching for Understanding 11th Grade Language Arts with an Emphasis on Creative Writing

강상윤영어카페

**You should have a checklist and make sure you are covering these six items as much as possible when you are writing.**

Plotting And Writing Suspense Fiction Books

7 Ways to Make Money Storytelling By Rebecca Matter

Poetry Timed Essay Practice & Strategies. Making the moves that matter

A COMPARISON BETWEEN NOVEL AND MOVIE VERSION OF JANE AUSTEN S PRIDE AND PREJUDICE: A STRUCTURAL APPROACH

CREATING CHARACTER ARCS: THE MASTERFUL AUTHOR'S GUIDE TO UNITING STORY STRUCTURE, PLOT, AND CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT BY K.M. WEILAND

in SCREENWRITING MASTER OF FINE ARTS Two-Year Accelerated

What is the best online essay writing website >>>CLICK HERE<<<

What Exactly Is The Difference Between A Fixed Mindset and Growth Mindset?


Science Fiction Literature (Semester Course - Grade 12) Prerequisite: American Literature & Contemporary Composition

4) Focus on having, not on lack Do not give any thought, power or energy to the thought of not having what you want.

Story Is Built on 4 Pillars

Genres and Subgenres. Classifying literature

Reading Menu 1. Name: DAY 1 DAY 2 DAY 3 DAY 4. Complete one reading activity for each day.

Ep #181: Proactivation

Guide to Self-Publishing

Williamsport Area School District

Writing a argumentative essay examples >>>CLICK HERE<<<

BOOK CLUB THE HOURS THIS PDF GUIDE IS NOT FOR DISTRIBUTION OR RESALE. THE COMPLETE PACKAGE FOR READERS AND LEADERS

Out of touch with the modern world or Timeless texts that stretch and challenge? You decide

Mammoth Bones and Broken Stones:

English I RI 1-3 Stop Wondering, Start Experimenting

Photos Description of «The actress» short film Storyboard of The Actress Anna Karenina Review

Humanities Center Forum Part 2 Yiyun Li

ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS - BIG IDEAS ACROSS THE GRADES

Football writing exercises

Section 3: Break Through the Competition: Hands-On Workshop to Make Your Novel Pop to the Top

Writing The First Screenplay II Instructor: Chris Webb

Ignite your passion & performance with energizing ideas and plans

Enhancing Decision Making, Performance and Leadership Through Mindfulness

It's not magic: Reading Harry Potter books can boost children's tolerance

Jenna: If you have, like, questions or something, you can read the questions before.

Interaction of Fantasy and Literary Fairy Tale in British Children s Literature

CONFLICT ANALYSIS OF THE MAIN CHARACTER IN NICHOLAS SPARKS S NOVEL THE LAST SONG

Self-Care Revolution Workbook 5 Pillars to Prevent Burnout and Build Sustainable Resilience for Helping Professionals

Manuscript Evaluation Checklist

30 Days of Inspiration

AUSTRALIAN BIRDS TEACHERS NOTES. Written by Matt Chun Published by Hardie Grant Egmont in October 2018 SYNOPSIS

To what extent does distorting the truth help reveal it? Exploring Themes in Fictitious Genres

Romance in Sports and Literature. In sports, as in life, there is a beginning and an end to every game, but what

Raymond s Run Lessons and Notes

Shubert s Extension Activities For Older Children

What No One Tells You About Blogging It s A Big Deal!

Motivational Quotes. Reflection Booklet VOLUME II

Transcription:

Why Fiction Is Good for You Kate Taylor When psychologist and author Keith Oatley writes his next novel, he can make sure that each description of a scene includes three key elements to better help the reader create a vivid mental image. Not one element; that would be forgettable. Not six elements; that might be boring. He could have learned this from Anton Chekhov, master of the short story. Oatley, a great admirer of the Russian writer, recalls one Chekhov story that includes a description of a pond under snow. With a factory. Across from a village. In fact, Oatley learned the lesson from a study that used MRI scans to show brain activity in readers: The area of the brain used to create a mental image was best activated when descriptive passages used three elements. Oatley, professor emeritus of cognitive psychology at the University of Toronto, is also the author of three novels, including The Case of Emily V. which won the Commonwealth Prize in 1994, but his most recent work combines the two fields. Such Stuff as Dreams: The Psychology of Fiction is part of a growing movement to find hard evidence for a soft pursuit, looking to various sciences to explain the power of fiction. Contrary to the notion that art merely copies life, Oatley s argument is that a movie, play, story, poem or novel creates a mental model in which readers can try out ideas about themselves and others. If you say fiction to anybody, they immediately say Oh, something that has been made up.... What you really want to know is what is the subject matter of fiction, he said. The subject matter of fiction is what people are up to with each other and within themselves, what it is to be a self, interacting with others in the social world.... If you want to read about genetics you read [Richard] Dawkins or someone, and you get good at understanding genetics. If you read fiction, what you get good at understanding is what goes on between people. 1 2 3 4 5 Taylor, Kate, Why fiction is good for you, The Globe and Mail (10 September 2011), page R21. <http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/why-fiction-is-good-for-you/ article2159339/> The Globe and Mail Inc. All Rights Reserved.

6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Oatley and his several colleagues are actually trying to measure that knowledge. In one study, they used a test in which subjects are asked to choose the emotion expressed in a photograph of a person s eyes, a measure of empathy developed by the British psychologist Simon Baron- Cohen, who studies autism. Fiction readers scored higher, even when the psychologists subtracted out influences that might suggest the more empathetic people would tend to read more fiction. To further test that empathy is a product of reading fiction rather than the reverse, York University psychologist Raymond Mar experimented with two groups of randomly selected subjects, one of which read a short story and the other a piece of non-fiction. He then subjected them to a test of social reasoning and found the short-story group performed better. Oatley would like to repeat such a study with a much larger group over a longer time period, perhaps signing up subjects who would agree to read only fiction or non-fiction for a year. In another study, Oatley s U of T colleague Maja Djikic rewrote the Chekhov short story The Lady with the Little Dog as a piece of nonfiction, as though this story of an illicit love affair were the transcript of a trial. When asked to perform standard personality tests, subjects who had read the real thing instead of her rewrite showed more signs of shifts in character traits. And the more emotions they reported feeling during their reading, the more they changed. There was no particular direction to these shifts in personality: If propaganda, rhetoric or marketing aims to push the reader one way, fiction simply opens up the possibility of movement. It is not that one puts bread into a toaster and it makes toast, Oatley said. It is an opportunity for the reader or the movie watcher to change. It s not a straight causal effect. Stressing the studies are preliminary, he speculates the personality shifts may be produced by the reader entering into the fictional character s mind. He uses the metaphor of a flight simulator to explain fiction s role in our lives: Just as the flight simulator allows the pilot-in-training to quickly and safely encounter all sorts of contingencies that might happen in the air, so fiction allows us to experience emotions in a safe place, training us to understand ourselves and others. Jane Austen s Pride and Prejudice is a wonderful example of the simulator effect. In the novel, Elizabeth and Darcy, both of them intelligent and proud, initially misread each other, but gradually come to an understanding of one another s minds that will then grow into love. Oatley points

out that the reader undergoes a similar process, coming to know and love the characters as Austen unfolds their story, thus experiencing the same dawning understanding and growing attachment. That is a beautiful structure, he said. This function also explains why reading groups are popular, and in Oatley s scheme, very important: They take the emotional training and multiply the effect. When you read the book yourself you have a particular understanding, but it is always very partial, so the moment you start talking with someone else about it, you are increasing the amount of brain power and coming at it from all these different directions, Oatley said. He has participated in the same book club for 20 years and finds its discussions often deepen his understanding not just of the book, but also of his friends in the group. So, a book club improves what psychologists call theory of mind. Acquired around the age of five, theory of mind is our awareness of our own and others consciousness and of the possibility they may believe something different from us. U.S. English professor Lisa Zunshine was one of the first to suggest fiction trains us in theory of mind. Similarly, U.S. philosopher Martha Nussbaum has argued that fiction teaches empathy, and so should be required reading for public leaders. Following that work, Oatley s cognitive approach is part of a trend toward seeking concrete explanations for literature s utility both inside and outside the English department. The so-called literary Darwinists see evolutionary purposes behind a kind of mental training that is crucial to living in groups, and argue that storytelling has evolved as an art form because of the prestige that accrues to the socially necessary storyteller. The evolutionary theorists put great emphasis on the storyteller; Oatley prefers to give pride of place to the reader. But both schools do permit their practitioners to judge the writer s art, even as some literary critics complain these new approaches are reductionist. Brian Boyd, a Nabokov scholar from New Zealand, subjects The Odyssey and Horton Hears a Who to evolutionary criticism in his recent book On the Origin of Stories: Evolution, Cognition and Fiction. He shows how the master storyteller holds his audience s attention and draws it toward particular aspects of his tale: Through the sympathetic Horton, Dr. Seuss makes us feel for the plight of the microscopic Whos. 14 15 16 17 18 19 20

21 22 23 For his part, Oatley is convinced that the better the writer, the more powerful the simulation, and he makes a distinction between literary fiction and genre fiction. You can have a good read, but it is sort of like going on a roller coaster. The engineers have constructed it so you have a particular set of experiences. You get off, your heart is beating a bit, but you are still the same person, he says of reading a thriller or detective story. On the other hand, Chekhov was a great artist: The effect is different the extent to which [the reader] can really inhabit another mind. The roller coaster may be fun, but the flight simulator... now that s art. Notes and Definitions MRI: Magnetic Resonance Imaging is a medical procedure to x-ray the internal workings of the body. (para. 3) cognitive psychology: a branch of psychology that examines how the mind works and processes information. (para. 4) Richard Dawkins (1941 ): an English author specializing in ethics and evolutionary biology. (para. 5) Jane Austen (1775 1817): an English novelist specializing in Romantic fiction. (para. 13) Structure and Technique Keith Oatley, author, psychologist, and professor emeritus of cognitive psychology at the University of Toronto, explores how reading fiction benefits the reader. Kate Taylor chronicles some of Professor Oatley s points and analogies as the professor outlines how readers place themselves in fictional situations to try-out an approach or idea or instance. Reading fiction broadens the ability to understand our relationships with others and opens the reader to possibilities, change, and a better grasp of another. Topics for Discussion and Writing 1. Where (what paragraph) does Professor Oatley s primary reason to read fiction appear?

2. What are the key reasons, according to Oatley, to read fiction? Are you convinced? Why or why not? 3. According to Oatley, book discussions are an important and valuable part of the fiction reading experience. Explain why or why not these reasons are persuasive? 4. Based on the structure and content of the article, imagine and describe the primary readers. 5. The story is an invaluable tool in all writing to connect the reader to the material, the speaker with the audience, and the student to the course. How does Taylor integrate stories into her work? 6. Is there an call for action from the reader? How has this influenced you about reading fiction?