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Dramatica Theory Book
Chapter
20: Section Two: The Art of Storytelling (Continued)
The Four Stages
of Communication
In bringing a story to an audience, through any media, there are four
distinct stages of communication through which the story will pass.
When an author is developing a story or looking for ways in which to improve
it, a good idea is always to evaluate how the story is working at each
of these stages individually. Problems can exist in any single stage or
bridge across into many. Seeing where the problem lies is half the work
of fixing it.
The Four Stages are:
Stage 1: Storyforming -- at which point the structural design and
dynamic settings of an idea are conceived. This is where the original
meaning of the story is born, the meaning which the author wants to communicate.
Stage 2: Storyencoding -- where the symbols with which the author
will work are chosen. Stories are presented through characters, setting,
and other particulars which are meant to symbolize the meaning of the
story. No symbols are inherently part of any Storyform, so the choices
of how a particular Storyform will be Storyencoded must
be considered carefully.
Stage 3: Storyweaving -- where the author selects an order and
emphasis to use in presenting his encoded story to his audience in the
final work. The way in which to deliver a story to an audience, piece
by piece, involves decisions about what to present first, second, and
last. The potential strategies are countless: you may start with the beginning,
as in Star Wars, or you my start with the end, as in Remains
of the Day, or with some combination, as in The Usual Suspects.
What you most want the audience to be thinking about will guide your decisions
in this stage, because choices made here have the most effect on the experience
of receiving the story as an audience member.
Stage 4: Reception -- where the audience takes over, interpreting
the symbols they've received and making meaning of the story. The audience
is a very active participant in its relationship with a story. It has
preconceptions which affect how it will see anything you put in front
of it. The audience is presented with a finished, Storywoven work and
hopes to be able to be able to interpret the work's symbols and decipher
the Storyforming intent of the authors behind the work. The accuracy with
which this is accomplished has a lot to do with how the story was developed
in the other three stages of communication.
There are many ways to play with any one of these stages and many reasons
for doing so. It all depends on what impact the author wants to make with
his work.
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