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Dramatica Theory Book
Chapter
38: Storytelling--Reception & Propaganda
(Continued)
Conditioning
as Propaganda
Presenting an audience
with an alternative life experience is yet another way to impact your
audience. By ignoring (or catering to) an audience's cultural bias, you
can present your story as an alternative reality. This impacts an audience
by undermining or reinforcing their own personal Memories. By experiencing
the story, the message/meaning of the story becomes part of the audience's
memory base.
The nature of the propaganda, however, is that the story lacks context,
which must be supplied by the audience. Thus personalized, the story memory
is automatically triggered when an experience in the audience's real life
summons similarly stored memories. Through repeated use, an audience's
"sensibilities" become conditioned.
In Conditioning propaganda, audience attention is directed to causal relationships
like When A also B (spatial), and If C then D (temporal).
The mechanism of this propaganda is to leave out a part of the causal
relationships in the story, such as When A also B and If ?? then D.
By leaving out one part, the objective contextual meaning is then supplied
automatically by the audience. The audience will replace ?? with something
from its own experience base, not consciously considering that a piece
is missing because it will have emotionally arrived at the contradiction:
When A also B and then D.
This type of propaganda is closest to the traditional usage of
the term with respect to stories, entertainment, and advertising. For
example, look at much of the tobacco and alcohol print advertising. Frequently
the Main Character (the type of person to whom the advertisement is supposed
to appeal) is attractive, has someone attractive with them, and appears
to be well situated in life. The inference is that when you smoke
or drink, you are also cool, and if you are cool then you will be rich
and attractive. The connection between "cool" and "rich
and attractive" is not really in the advertisement but an audience
often makes that connection for itself. In Conditioning propaganda, more
than in the other three forms of propaganda, the degree of impact on your
audience is extremely dependent on your audience's life experience outside
the story experience .
Crimes and Misdemeanors is a film example that employs this conditioning
technique of propaganda. The unusual aspect of the film is that it has
two completely separate stories in it. The "Crimes" story involves
a self-interested man who gets away with murder and personally becomes
completely OK with it (a Success/Good story). The "Misdemeanors"
story involves a well meaning man who loses his job, his girl, and is
left miserable (a Failure/Bad story). By supplying two competing stories
instead of one, the audience need not supply its own experiences to arrive
at a false context while viewing this work. Audiences will come to stories,
however, with a particular cultural bias. In our culture, Failure/Bad
stories which happen to nice people are regrettable, but familiar; Success/Good
stories about murderers are uncommon and even "morally reprehensible."
The propaganda comes into effect when the audience experiences in its
own life a Failure/Bad scenario that triggers a recollection of the Success/Good
story about forgetting the grief of having murdered - an option that the
audience would not normally have considered. Lacking an objective contextual
meaning that sets one over the other, both stories are given equal consideration
as viable solutions. Thus, what was once inconceivable due to a cultural
or personal bias is now automatically seen as a possible avenue for problem-solving.
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