Date post: | 29-Aug-2014 |
Category: |
Entertainment & Humor |
Upload: | monica-brasov-curca |
View: | 407 times |
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The power of telling [other
peoples] stories.
Stories are personal and private.
Stories not only belong to one person but to their families, tribes and to their people.
A transactional quest:
Banking and collecting other peoples stories for the sake of the “cause” – one that the storyteller is usually benefiting from.
War, lack of immigration reform, crisis, tragedy, humanitarian disaster.
“I wanna use your story”
Dominant Race Narrative
Everyone fits into the space that was meant for them… even in our stories
Can Do Harm
Trigger implicit bias – rather then a nuanced, layered and realistic contextualized story.
Social Distance
Between: audience and characters
characters are from another planet
super heroes...villains…victims…martyrs…women
Become our Objects
The values, motivations, actions, histories, knowledge, ideas of the story characters
become our
Talking Points
OUR Talking pointsShowing off points “Look what we have in our toolbox”
Objectified examples for how our work is successful
Inserting ourselves as the hero in the story
“I have empowered our leaders to do this action”
Changing the Narrative The Dignity Model
Acceptance of Identity: First thing you need to do when you want to honor peoples’ dignity is to accept that they are neither inferior nor superior to you.
Acknowledgment: People like to feel that they matter. Acknowledgment can be assimple as smiling at others when they walk by to formally recognizing them forsomething they have done for which they deserve credit.
Inclusion: No one likes to feel left out or that they don’t belong. When we are included, we feel good about who we are.
Safety: There are two kinds of safety that are important to dignity: physical andpsychological. Physical threats need no explanation but psychological threats are morecomplicated. Honoring others’ psychological safety means not shaming, humiliating,diminishing, or hurtfully criticizing them, especially, but not limited to, violations that arepublic.
Changing the Narrative :The Dignity Model
Fairness: We all have a particularly strong knee-jerk reaction to being treated unfairly.If we want to honor the dignity of others, we need to ensure that we are honoring agreedupon laws and rules of fairness—both implicit and explicit—when we interact with them.
Freedom: A major dignity violation occurs when we restrict people and try to controltheir lives. Honoring this element of dignity requires that people feel free fromdomination and that they are able to experience hope and a future that is filled with asense of possibility.
Understanding: There is nothing more frustrating than to feel misunderstood, especiallywhen you are in conflict with others. Extending dignity means that you give others thechance to explain themselves, actively listening to them for the sole purpose ofunderstanding their perspective.
Changing the Narrative:The Dignity Model
Responsiveness: We all want to be seen and heard. Treating people as if they wereinvisible or ignoring them by not responding to their concerns is a violation of their dignity.
Righting the Wrong: When we violate someone’s dignity, it is important to takeresponsibility and apologize for the hurt we have caused. It is a way for us to regain ourown dignity as well as acknowledging the wrongdoing to the person you violated.
Benefit of the Doubt: Treating people as though they were trustworthy—giving them thebenefit of the doubt that they are acting with good intention—is honoring their dignity.
How can we apply these to our work
?