Introduction
In his book “Convergence Culture”, Henery Jenkins addresses
the life story as a form of narrative which he defines as many linguistic media
oral, written image based or other different non verbal symbols. He mentioned
that life stories and research on them occur across disciplines, it examines
how these life stories creativity operate within the complex relationships that
lie between these stories, lives and truths passing through different media and
genres. In this paper, there will be a discussion of the grounds of Jenkins’s
optimism supplied by a support to his views with the reasons behind it that are
supplemented with examples from real life from the current digital age we live
in. (Smith, 2019)
Creativity of Life Stories
Creativity has its critical impact in the lives of older
people providing them with stimulation and giving sense of self worth. Through
creativity, they can explore new endeavors, develop their sense of identity and
help them better cope with the process of aging. Every one of them can tell his
or her story of life and how creativity affected their life to learn new values
and get involved to better life patterns and end up with having determined life
stories. Older people may lose opportunities for growth, however, creativity
and creative patterns of life can teach them much about themselves. Creative
flow can produce better opportunities and enhanced expertise with greater
psychological growth and transformation. Through it, the individual is capable
of deepening his understanding of self and cultivates purposeful involvements. (Banks, 2019)
Life Stories and How They are Creative
According to Jenkins, the lived material of life gets shaped
as narrative in life stories. In the sector of narrative psychology, we cannot
find an individual’s life story on any kind of internet biography, giving the
facts and events of life, rather, it is the way an individual integrates those
facts and events internally and weave them back together to make a certain
meaning. This narrative shall shape his identity in which everything he or she
picks to include in the life story can reflect and shape who he or she is altogether.
A life story does not only tell us what happened in someone’s everyday life,
it, on the contrary, tells us why the events in this life were important, what
they meant for that individual and who exactly he or she is. When we tell other
people about ourselves, they tell our story in a narrative manner, this is how
people communicate. But we think about our lives to ourselves in a narrative
manner as well, we set a plot that leads us from one point to another. An old
adage implies that everyone has a book inside his mind. Some people tend to
write down in their diaries what occurs to them every day; nevertheless,
researchers believe there is a large percent of people in the world who see
their life as a story, and this is a common thing. These stories are not
necessarily quite simple like fairy tales, the can have its own complications
with lots of events going on in the environment surrounding people. (Beck, 2019)
According to researchers, narrative identity is constructed
through the life development in adolescence and young adulthood. There is a
relationship between the autobiographical reasoning and the psychological
functioning of young adulthood. Young adults can construct life story
narratives coded for the presence and valence of autobiographic reasoning,
which is measured by the connections that lie between the events of life that
are described in everyone’s self in negative, positive, neutral and mixed
manner.( Fox, 1983)
Two Kinds of Stories to Tell About Ourselves
We all create our histories marked with highs and lows, and
we share it to the world so we can shape our lives more meaningfully and
purposely. Unlike any story we might have heard, our life does not follow a
predefined path. Our experiences and identities are shifting constantly telling
how we make sense of it. By taking these pieces of our lives and putting them
together into a narrative we can create a unified whole which let us understand
our lives coherently as a source of meaning. Researchers describe narrative
identity as an internalized story we create about ourselves, as our own
personal tailored myth. It contains heroes and villains like any myth who keep
helping us or holding us back. Our life story is not an exhaustive history of
everything that has happened, but we make the narrative choices ourselves. It
focuses on the most extraordinary events, good and bad ones, because these
experiences are what we need to make sense of and shape us therefore. (Medium, 2019)
How Media Affects Our Life Stories Path
Sometimes, it is hard to believe that it was only over a
decade ago that our life was different from how we live now. Social media sites
were available long before that but most people did not have access to them
before that time. It is not just social media it is all kind of media that we
encounter today and deal with, all of these media types have shaped our
personality as we shaped it, we are the creator of it and they impacted our
life and change how the story telling will be. On the one hand, businesses
everywhere can now send their message to wider audience inside their countries
and outside it. For small businesses they became capable of creating their own
path in the marketplace which affected the life of people working in these
companies and how they respond to different things around them. On the other
hand, on social life, media has broken down the barriers when it comes to
communication and provided different choices for contacting each other. Social
media, for instance, made it easier to express ourselves and provided numerous
ways for that not only with people we know but to the whole eternal world as
well. It affected our character as it made it possible to track people down. To
find older friends who we no longer meet which can open chances and
opportunities in front of us in different ways. (Singer,
2013)
Amira and Media
This is time to tell an example of how media affected us so
we became part of it, this is Amira, a middle aged woman who used to deal with direct
contacts only at work or in social life. Few years ago, Amira had no idea about
media and different tools it provide to us, then she met one of her old school
friends who asked her to add her on her facebook account. Amira did not know
anything about facebook until this time, she asked her friend to clarify what
exactly she meant by adding on facebook. Her friend gave her a quick
explanation and created an account for her. Now, Amira has a store on facebook
where she sells cloths online. But if media has helped Amira financially, how
can it change her life story? The answer lies here, Amira used to be a shy
person, her life story was limited to those who are close to her, her family
and friends, now she owns her business and she became open to different social
opportunities, not just business opportunities, her character is changed, she
became more social, she can talk with everyone fluently, with no shy, now she
has more details to add to her life story compared to before she used the
media.
Conclusion
According to Henery Jenkins, life story is a complex
narrative and everyday truth, he says that as everyone was learning how to
become a more active participant in the media environment, as more and more
people were producing and circulating media themselves, they became part of a
larger media landscape. We agree with him and we provided the support in this
paper. We begin by focusing on life stories and creativity, it has its critical
impact in the lives of older people providing them with stimulation and giving
sense of self worth. Through creativity, they can explore new endeavors,
develop their sense of identity and help them better cope with the process of
aging. In the sector of narrative psychology, we cannot find an individual’s
life story on any kind of internet biography, giving the facts and events of
life, rather, it is the way an individual integrates those facts and events
internally and weave them back together to make a certain meaning. According to
researchers, narrative identity is constructed through the life development in
adolescence and young adulthood. There is a relationship between the
autobiographical reasoning and the psychological functioning of young
adulthood. Then we discussed how media affects our life stories path either
socially or in the field of business, how it shaped our personality. On the one
hand, businesses everywhere can now send their message to wider audience inside
their countries and outside it. On the other hand, on social life, media has
broken down the barriers when it comes to communication and provided different
choices for contacting each other. We provided an example of Amira who
participated in the change of media and the media changed her life story as
well eventually. (Smith, 2019)
References
1.
Banks, M.
(2019). NARRATIVE IDENTITY: THE CONSTRUCTION OF THE LIFE STORY,
AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL REASONING AND PSYCHOLOGICAL FUNCTIONING IN YOUNG ADULTHOOD.
Victoria.
2.
Beck, J.
(2019). The Story of Your Life. [online] The Atlantic. Available
at: https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2015/08/life-stories-narrative-psychology-redemption-mental-health/400796/
[Accessed 27 Sep. 2019].
3.
Fox, R.
(1983). The past is always present: Creative methods for capturing the life
story. Clinical Social Work Journal, 11(4), pp.368-378.
4.
Medium.
(2019). Ways social media has changed our society. [online]
Available at:
https://medium.com/w-i-t/ways-social-media-has-changed-our-society-38fd4d3e5ce8
[Accessed 27 Sep. 2019].
5.
Singer,
J., Blagov, P., Berry, M. and Oost, K. (2013). Self-Defining Memories, Scripts,
and the Life Story: Narrative Identity in Personality and Psychotherapy. Journal
of Personality, 81(6), pp.569-582.
6.
Smith, E.
(2019). The two kinds of stories we tell about ourselves. [online]
ideas.ted.com. Available at: https://ideas.ted.com/the-two-kinds-of-stories-we-tell-about-ourselves/
[Accessed 27 Sep. 2019].
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