| Home > Archives > Volume 21 No. 1 - Fall 2006 > Good Stuff: Blessed Are the Storytellers |
Good Stuff: Blessed Are the Storytellers |
|
Fall 2006
By Herbert Kohl Why Monkeys Live in Trees
and Other Stories from Benin Holding Values: What We Mean Where I live, in Point Arena, Calif., you can often see people leaning on the beds of their trucks, gossiping and telling stories. It's an informal classroom where I learn about what's going on in the community and how the past connects to the present. Raouf Mama, in his wonderful book, retells trickster and sacred stories from his native Benin. He describes this blessed nature of stories in this excerpted poem that opens the book: Blessed are the storytellers, for to them God gave the gift of eloquence, That their words may go forth to the four corners of the earth. Charged with the fire of passion and the wisdom of the ages, Blessed are the storytellers, for in the magic circle of the storyteller's art We enter into the drama of the human heart. I can imagine reading Mama's wonderful stories in a kindergarten class or in a graduate seminar. Students could talk about them and create their own versions. We are blessed with such stories as "Why Monkeys Live in Trees," "Why Bee Makes Honey and Snake Crawls on Its Belly" and "The Most Delicious Food in the World." There are many good anthologies of stories and tales, but Raouf Mama is telling the stories from his own tradition and crafts his knowledge to the page in an illuminating and artistic way. Holding Values is quite different, but equally interesting. It consists of short essays — stories, really — told by members of the North Dakota Study Group, an organization created by Vito Perrone when he was dean of the school of education at the University of North Dakota. The central purpose of the group was to affirm support for progressive education and, when necessary, redefine progressivism according to the nature of current educational needs and debates. This book brings together the voices of many educators who have been members of the group: Deborah Meier, Lillian Weber, Joseph and Helen Featherstone, Leslie Alexander, Eleanor Duckworth, and Maria Sapon-Shevin. The stories are a way to help us all to keep to humane values in the schools and escape from the tyranny of No Child Left Behind. Fall 2006 |
Vol. 21, No. 1 The Tougher Standards Fad Hits Home SPECIAL REPORT: New Orleans Schools After Katrina EDITORIAL: The Educational Land Grab Voices from the Big Uneasy Hurricane Katrina: Reading injustice, celebrating solidarity Exploding the Privatization Myth Socrates, Plato, Eric and Guys Like Me Rethinking School ReadinessCOLUMNS AND DEPARTMENTS Letters Strange Stuff Short Stuff
|
||||
| ORDER | Current Issue | Article Index | Archives | Web Resources | Publications | Just For Fun | Who We Are | | |||||
|
© 2002 Rethinking Schools * 1001 E. Keefe Avenue, Milwaukee, WI
53212 * Phone(414) 964-9646, or (800) 669-4192, |
|||||