ABSTRACT

To be a storyteller is an incredible position from which to influence hearts and minds, and each one of us has the capacity to utilise storytelling for a sustainable future. This book offers unique and powerful insights into how stories and storytelling can be utilised within higher education to support sustainability literacy. Stories can shape our perspective of the world around us and how we interact with it, and this is where storytelling becomes a useful tool for facilitating understanding of sustainability concepts which tend to be complex and multifaceted.

The craft of storytelling is as old as time and has influenced human experience throughout the ages. The conscious use of storytelling in higher education is likewise not new, although less prevalent in certain academic disciplines; what this book offers is the opportunity to delve into the concept of storytelling as an educational tool regardless of and beyond the boundaries of subject area.

Written by academics and storytellers, the book is based on the authors’ own experiences of using stories within teaching, from a story of “the Ecology of Law” to the exploration of sustainability in accounting and finance via contemporary cinema. Practical advice in each chapter ensures that ideas may be put into practice with ease.

In addition to examples from the classroom, the book also explores wider uses of storytelling for communication and sense-making and ways of assessing student storytelling work. It also offers fascinating research insights, for example in addressing the question of whether positive utopian stories relating to climate change will have a stronger impact on changing the behaviour of readers than will dystopian stories.

Everyone working as an educator should fi nd some inspiration here for their own practice; on using storytelling and stories to co-design positive futures together with our students.

part I|82 pages

Storytelling as a pedagogical tool (research and conceptualisation)

chapter 4|14 pages

Storytelling for sustainability

A definition and its implications for education and communication

chapter 5|9 pages

How to tell stories

chapter 6|10 pages

Storying the past

Using historical fiction to teach sustainability

chapter 7|17 pages

Storying the future

Storytelling practice in transformative systems

chapter 8|13 pages

Which work best

Cautionary tales or positive role models?

part II|89 pages

Applied storytelling

chapter 11|13 pages

“The Future Has Gone Bad; We Need a New One” 1

Neoliberal science fiction and the writing of ecotopian possibility

chapter 12|11 pages

Reading ecological memoirs

What narrative therapy can tell us about the power of discussing books in groups

chapter 13|14 pages

‘Inside Story’

Participatory storytelling and imagination in eco-pedagogical contexts

part III|208 pages

Storytelling through the disciplines

chapter 16|11 pages

The secret of dreaming

Introducing systems thinking and world-view

chapter 19|10 pages

Cowboys, cooking stoves and corporations

Engineering a new future through storytelling

chapter 20|12 pages

Going for a walk

Using psychogeography to explore sustainability in art and design

chapter 24|17 pages

Storytelling in the field of law and sustainability

Five different stories about “The Ecology of Law”

chapter 27|13 pages

Social entrepreneurship

A facilitator of social progress

chapter 30|13 pages

Conclusion

Stepping into sustainable futures: actions, developments and networks