ABSTRACT

In this narrative collage of ancient and contemporary storytelling, modern theory, and personal reflection, Ian William Sewall seeks to infuse western pedagogy with a folkloral teaching voice. Through multilayered conversations with individuals and groups—traditional storytellers, teachers, children—he examines the dynamic nature of oral culture, its embodied nature, its connection to place, and its use of metaphor, laughter, ethnicity, and intergenerational conversation to create unique kinds of interactions and learning. Offering storytelling as an “ancestral template” of good teaching, Sewall demonstrates how teachers can use the folkoral voice to inform and transform classroom practice.

chapter 1

To Places That Are Remote

chapter 2|87 pages

Orality

chapter 3|61 pages

Metaphor

chapter 4|45 pages

Laughter

chapter 5|43 pages

The Intergenerational Conversation

chapter 6|25 pages

And If The Fiddle String Hadn’t Broke…