Subtitles section Play video
-
Emily Dickinson said over a century ago
-
that there is no frigate like a book to take us lands away,
-
and it's true.
-
When we pick up a book, turn on the TV, or watch a movie,
-
We're carried away down the currents of story into a world of imagination.
-
And when we land, on a shore that is both new and familiar,
-
something strange happens.
-
Stepping on to the shore, we're changed.
-
We don't retrace the footsteps of the authors or characters we followed here:
-
no. Instead we walk a mile in their shoes.
-
Researchers in psychology, neuroscience, child development, and biology
-
are finally starting to gain quantifiable scientific evidence
-
showing what writers and readers have always known:
-
That stories have a unique ability to change a person's point of view.
-
Scholars are discovering evidence that stories shape culture
-
and that much of what we believe about life comes not from fact
-
but from fiction, that our ideas
-
of class, marriage, and even gender
-
are relatively new, and that many ideologies which held fast for centuries
-
were revised within the 18th century, and re-drafted in the pages of the early novel.
-
Imagine a world where class, and not hard work, decide a person's worth.
-
A world where women are simply men's more untamed copy.
-
A world where marriage for love is a novel notion.
-
Well, that was the world in which Samuel Richardson's Pamela first appeared.
-
Richardson's love story starred a poor, serving-class heroine
-
who is both morally superior and smarter than her upper-class suitor.
-
The book, challenging a slew of traditions,
-
caused quite a ruckus.
-
There was more press for Pamela than for Parliament.
-
It spawned intense debate and several counter-novels.
-
Still, for all those who couldn't accept Pamela,
-
others were eager for this new fictional world.
-
This best-seller, and all its literary heirs,
-
Pride and Prejudice, Jane Eyre, and yes, even Twilight,
-
Have continuously shared the same tale, and taught similar lessons
-
which are now conventional and commonplace.
-
Similarly, novels have helped shape the minds
-
of thought leaders across history.
-
Some scholars say that Darwin's Theory of Evolution
-
is highly indebted to the plots he read and loved.
-
His theory privileges intelligence,
-
swiftness, and adaptability to change- all core characteristics in a hero.
-
Whether you're reading Harry Potter or Great Expectations,
-
you're reading the kind of plot that inspired Darwin.
-
Yet recent studies show that his theory might not be the whole story,
-
our sense of being a hero- one man, or one woman, or even one species
-
taking on the challenges of the world might be wrong.
-
Instead of being hard-wired for competition,
-
for being the solitary heroes in our own story,
-
we might instead be members of a shared quest.
-
More Hobbit than Harry.
-
Sometimes, of course, the shoes we've been walking in can get plain worn out.
-
After all, we haven't walked just one mile in Jane Austen or Mark Twain's shoes,
-
we've walked about a hundred trillion miles in them.
-
This isn't to say that we can't read and enjoy the classics,
-
we should travel with Dickens,
-
let Pip teach us what to expect from ourselves,
-
have a talk with Austen and Elizabeth about our prides and prejudices.
-
We should float with Twain down the Mississippi,
-
and have Jim show us what it means to be good.
-
But on our journey, we should also keep in mind
-
that the terrain has changed. We'll start shopping around for boots
-
that were made for walking into a new era.
-
Take, for instance, Katniss Everdeen and her battle with the Capitol.
-
Can Hunger Games lead us into thinking about capitalism in a new way?
-
Can it teach us a lesson about why the individual should not put herself before the group?
-
Will Uglies reflect the dangers of pursuing a perfect body
-
and letting the media define what is beautiful?
-
Will Seekers trod a path beyond global warming?
-
Will the life and death struggles of Toklo,
-
Kallik, Lusa, and the other bears chart a course for understanding animals
-
and our place in their world?
-
Only the future will tell which stories will engage our imagination,
-
which tales of make-believe we'll make tomorrow,
-
but the good news is this:
-
There are new stories to venture in every day.
-
New tales that promise to influence, to create, and to spark change.
-
Stories that you might even write yourself.
-
So I guess the final question is this:
-
what story will you try on next?