Applying the Lessons of Folktales by Phyllis Ralley

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I
came into Multicultural Folktales II this semester with an "I don't like
folktales” chip on my shoulder. What could all those goofy stories I had heard
as a kid have to say to me today?

What
I have found out is that the stories I heard as a kid had their basis in the
"real" folk and fairy tales, but they were pasteurized and
homogenized. Now that I am finally finding the real meat and potatoes of the
fairy tales and studying the cultural contexts in which they arose and evolved,
I understand how much power they really have. 

Reading
Jack Zipes book "The Irresistible Fairy Tale" I found, "stories
work with people, for people, and always stories work on people, affecting what
people are able to see as real, as possible, and as worth doing or best
avoided." Stories can change the world! I
think that the magic of story is it causes people to listen and remember, and
what could be more important when you are trying to communicate?

My
challenge these days is joining with my fellow alumni of Paolo Soleri's
Arcosanti to finish the Arcology and populate it with a vision of a way of
living that has never been seen before except in Paolo's philosophy. There are
7000 alumni from back in the late 60's when the city in the desert began. Three
hundred of us just came together to celebrate Paolo's life, and our challenge
now is to listen to each other and to craft the story for the world that will
get our Arcosanti completed and populated. Story might help us do that.

Phyllis
Ralley
Arcosanti
class of 1975 

5 responses to “Applying the Lessons of Folktales by Phyllis Ralley”

  1. Sharon Gilbert Avatar
    Sharon Gilbert

    Wow Phyllis. So glad you joined the storytelling world. In the 60’s I lived in MD–there was an amazing exhibit at the National Gallery of Art of Paolo Soleri’s vision of Archology–My friend and I were blown away by his vision, little did I know that in the 70’s I’d be living in AZ and visiting the site. Tell the stories!

  2. Sally Borg Avatar
    Sally Borg

    Phyllis, you are right on target. Stories will help you fulfill that dream. Through stories, you will captivate the hearts and attention of many.

  3. James Ashcroft Avatar
    James Ashcroft

    Phyllis, I want to hear the story of Arcosanti when you have it figured out. Or, maybe before then. What has the experience of Arcosanti meant to you? I also loved your use of the words homogenized and pasteurized. I feel the same way. The tales are so much more interesting in the raw. Eating raw is en vogue right now, why not stories raw?
    Jim

  4. Nancy Newlin Avatar
    Nancy Newlin

    Phyllis, I love the way you bring your own life and your own passions to the world of story and storytelling. I love the way you are telling stories to your colleagues at work – only great things can come from that!
    Nancy

  5. Anne McDowell Avatar
    Anne McDowell

    Phyllis,
    I so enjoy your creativity and storytelling–so this going to be amazing!

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