The podcast explores the impact of writing on social fabric and cultural traditions. It discusses the preservation of oral culture and the transmission of knowledge through storytelling. The challenges of creating nuclear warning messages for the future are also explored. The episode delves into the tradition of bedtime stories and the epic poem Beowulf. Listeners can also find additional linguistic content and support the show through various platforms.
The transition from oral to written culture has had a profound impact on memory, storytelling, and the transmission of knowledge.
Writing has provided a means to remember and transmit information over long periods of time.
Memorable units, such as proverbs and catchy phrases, play a significant role in oral culture by aiding memory and conveying important cultural values and wisdom.
Deep dives
The Power of Oral Storytelling
Oral storytelling is celebrated for its ability to convey powerful narratives and engage audiences emotionally. The impact of oral storytelling is exemplified by the way people share personal stories of how they met, highlighting the different perspectives and nuances that arise. Such narratives can shape cultural shifts, preserve knowledge, and transmit important lessons.
Transition from Oral to Written Culture
The transition from oral to written culture has had a profound impact on memory, storytelling, and the transmission of knowledge. In the past, different cultures relied on oral tradition to preserve important stories, myths, and legends. However, the advent of writing introduced the need for recording and preserving narratives in written form, resulting in changes to social dynamics and the way stories were passed down.
The Influence of Literacy on Memory
Writing has provided a means to remember and transmit information over long periods of time. The ability to record stories and ideas has been crucial for preserving cultural heritage and historical events. However, literacy has also influenced the way stories are remembered and shared, as it allows for more precise and static recordings that may not fully capture the dynamism and variations found in oral storytelling.
The Role of Memorable Units
Memorable units, such as proverbs and catchy phrases, play a significant role in oral culture by aiding memory and conveying important cultural values and wisdom. These units are designed to be memorable and easily passed down through generations. They capture the essence of stories and lessons in succinct and memorable ways, making them a powerful tool in oral communication.
Oral Culture vs Memes
While memes are often associated with oral culture due to their humorous and shareable nature, they are actually a product of written culture. Memes rely on written language and the ability to search and share specific templates or variants. In contrast, true oral culture relies on repetitive, sticky, and mnemonic forms to aid memory and transmission of narratives and cultural knowledge.
For tens of thousands of years, humans have transmitted long and intricate stories to each other, which we learned directly from witnessing other people telling them. Many of these collaboratively composed stories were among the earliest things written down when a culture encountered writing, such as the Iliad and the Odyssey, the Mwindo Epic, and Beowulf.
In this episode, your hosts Gretchen McCulloch and Lauren Gawne get enthusiastic about how writing things down changes how we feel about them. We talk about a Ted Chiang short story comparing the spread of literacy to the spread of video recording, how oral cultures around the world have preserved astronomical information about the Seven Sisters constellation for over 10,000 years, and how the field of nuclear semiotics looks to the past to try and communicate with the far future. We also talk about how "oral" vs " written" culture should perhaps be referred to as "embodied" vs "recorded" culture because signed languages are very much part of this conversation, where areas of residual orality have remained in our own lives, from proverbs to gossip to guided tours, and why memes are an extreme example of literate culture rather than extreme oral culture.
Read the transcript here: https://lingthusiasm.com/post/742445104511500288/transcript-episode-89-connecting-with-oral
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For links to things mentioned in this episode: https://lingthusiasm.com/post/742444321413939200/lingthusiasm-episode-89-connecting-with-oral
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