Chimamanda Ngozi argues that our lives are filled with stories to hear but if we only hear single story about another person or country we risk critical misunderstanding.In 2009 the Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie a very well known Nigerian author gave an amazing TED talk called “ The Danger of Single story.” in her speech she talks about how people only know one side of story and have a lot of misunderstanding about a person or country because they have only heard one story all their life. In the speech The Danger of Single story Chimamanda Ngozi used anecdote, pathos, and ethos to reach her goal of telling people that they should look a story from another perspective to see the other side of story. throughout the speech, Chimamanda tells stories …show more content…
In her speech she cited "Finish your food! Don't you know? People like Fide's family have nothing." so I felt pity enormes for Field's family”. She points out how her mother taken away Fide’s humanity by creating him as an example to Adichie and her siblings to grateful of things and the food she have. She also added “What struck me was this: She had felt sorry for me even before she saw me. Her default position toward me, as an African, was a kind of patronizing, well-meaning pity” Ngozi describes how easily people can create misunderstanding about someone or place that they have never seen before because of the single stories that people created. It Her point is that If we minimize people to one you’re taking away their humanity and their emotions by creating a single story about them like her …show more content…
She started by telling her stories starting with herself. In her speech Adichie stated “ My mother says that I started reading at the age of two,although I think four is probably close to the truth. So I was an early reader, and what I read were British and American children's books”. In her speech Chimamanda started by telling her story to sight that she was an early english language learner. Chimamanda also added “I began to write, at about the age of seven,....... I wrote exactly the kinds of stories I was reading: All my characters were white and blue-eyed, they played in the snow, they ate apples,”. Chimamanda used her story to sight that she was early reader and writer but she was caught in single story from an early age because she had alway read and write the same single American and British books. What this conclude educe that children are taught single story from an early age but we as parents should prevent that because that creates critical misunderstanding in future. In the speech The Danger of Single story Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie used anecdote, pathos, and ethos to reach her goal by telling people that they should look a story from another perspective to see the other side of story.Chimamanda Ngozi provided stories of her own and her roommate to convince manner to audience the different ways that single story can create different stereotype of people and places. Adichie’s speech left the
Storytelling’s impact on people who use it has been life saving in certain cases. By asserting the existence of different perspectives, writers get to suppress their own opinions in order to sympathize with others. (insert thing about meta-fiction) With this idea in mind, author Kate Taylor wrote the novel Serial Monogamy, a meta-fiction of a writer recalling the story of her husband’s affair and her deal with terminal breast cancer, all through her telling of Dickens’ secret life and tales of the Arabian Nights. In Serial Monogamy, storytelling makes people more understanding as they explore new perspectives.
Individualism is an essential part of stories, because individuals tell stories. They also add and take out what they want to in the story, like Luo did when he didn’t say in his story (p149) that the seamstress got bit by a snake while swimming for Lou’s keys that he tossed in the water.
The only thing her mother told her about him was that his family was very poor. One day, when Adichie went to visit the boy’s family she learned an important lesson.Adichie says, “I was startled. It had not occurred to me that anybody in his family could actually make something. All I had heard about them was how poor they were, so that it had become impossible for me to see them as anything else but poor. Their poverty was my single story of them” (TED 3:42)Adichie only thought of his family as poor because that was all she knew. If people went off of what they only knew and not of what they could learn and or see the world would be very different. People like to think they know everything that goes on in the world but they sometimes don't. Throughout her Ted Talk Adichie lists many dangers of a single story, There are so many to where sometimes people don't know it could be a danger of a single
In the novel Segu, Maryse Conde beautifully constructs personal and in depth images of African history through the use of four main characters that depict the struggles and importance of family in what is now present day Mali. These four characters and also brothers, by the names of Tiekoro, Siga, Naba, and Malobali are faced with a world changing around their beloved city of Bambara with new customs of the Islamic religion and the developing ideas of European commerce and slave trade. These new expansions in Africa become stepping stones for the Troare brothers to face head on and they have brought both victory and heartache for them and their family. These four characters are centralized throughout this novel because they provide the reader with an inside account of what life is like during a time where traditional Africa begins to change due to the forceful injection of conquering settlers and religions. This creates a split between family members, a mixing of cultures, and the loss of one’s traditions in the Bambara society which is a reflection of the (WHAT ARE SOME CHANGES) changes that occur in societies across the world.
Narratives are an important part of an essay as they create a sense of tone needed to describe a story or situation with ease. If the narrative is not correct, it can leave a false impact on the readers or viewers because it lacks the main tone of the story. Having a perfect narrative can not only enhance a story, but it can also prove evidence. In her essay, “An Army of One: Me”, Jean Twenge provides some of the best examples of how narratives enhance a story and she also emphasizes on how the tone of storytelling matters on the impact that the story would have on its readers or listeners. Apart from Twenge, Tim O’Brien also focuses on how the narrative of the story can help in understanding the truth and falsity of the story in his essay, “How to Tell a True War Story.” In addition to O’Brien, Ethan Watters also emphasizes on the narrative of cultural progress in his essay, “The Mega-Marketing of Depression in Japan”, when he talks about the anti-depressants to be sold in Japan. All three authors agree to the fact that narrative, the art of telling a story or explaining a situation, has a major impact on the story and on how it is taken by the audience.
In life, there will always be ghastly memories standing in one’s way of achieving eternal happiness. It is up to mankind to determine how individuals should overcome adversity so they can experience the blissfulness that life has to offer. In Joy Kogawa’s novel, Obasan, Naomi’s experience throughout her life reveals the conflict between man versus self. Naomi seeks to find balance between remembering and forgetting her tragic childhood. Kogawa demonstrates how eradicating one’s past, dwelling on previous experiences, experiencing trauma, and shielding another from trauma can lead to one’s corruption.
By retorting with, “I had just read a novel called American Psycho … such a shame that young Americans were serial murderers.” Adichie appealed to Americans’ knowledge of themselves, showing the audience how absurd this claim was. Her sarcasm not only serves to make an absurd idea amusing, but also reverses the single story on the audience. She proves to the listener that it is through accurate knowledge and multiple stories that our opinions should be formed. In the same way, Adichie uses levity yet again when she says, “I learned, some years ago, that writers were expected to have had really unhappy childhoods to be successful, I began to think about how I could invent horrible things my parents had done to me. But the truth is that I had a very happy childhood, full of laughter and love, in a very close-knit family.” Her humor again draws attention to the danger of just one story. For instance, Adichie says, “writers were expected to have had really unhappy childhoods to be successful.”
Chimamanda Adichie, in one of her eye-opening speeches, The Danger of a Single Story, provides the audience with a new insight into the negative impacts that can occur as a result of viewing a story from a single perspective and not putting in an effort to know it from all available viewpoints. Adichie in her simple, yet well-grounded speech, filled with anecdotes of her personal experiences effectively puts across her argument against believing in stereotypes and limiting oneself to just a single story using a remarkable opening, the elements of logos, pathos and ethos, repetitions, as well as maintaining a good flow of thoughts throughout the speech.
After meticulously reading the article “ A Life Revealed” by the National Geographic Magazine, I have developed numerous thoughts over what it truly means to have a story. The article declares the abilities of one photographer who struggled to rediscover one of the subjects he previously photographed. Her name was Sharbat Gula, the woman whose photograph drastically changed the others’ opinions over refugees in the Middle East. With captivating sea green eyes and a flat expression, she stared into the souls of the people, revealing all the hardships she experienced, through simply an expression. Back in 1985, this picture inspired thousands to aid the refugees. But if this enthralling woman truly affected my view of the refugees, should I not know her name?
Watch this Ted Talk, The Danger of a Single Story: https://www.ted.com/talks/chimamanda_adichie_the_danger_of_a_single_story?language=en (Links to an external site.)
In 2009 Chimamanda Adichie gave a TED talk about the ‘danger of a single story’. A single story meaning, one thought or one example of a person becoming what we think about all people that fit that description, a stereotype if you will. In today’s America, I believe that we have all felt the wave of stereotypical views at some point or another. Adichie gives many relatable examples throughout her life of how she has been affected by the single story. Her story brings about an issue that all humans, from every inch of the earth, have come to understand on some level. A young child reading only foreign books, a domestic helper that she only perceived as poor. Her college roommates single story about Africans and her own formation of a single
...ng, Anne. Storytelling: Reflecting on Oral Narratives and Cultures. San Diego, CA: Cognella, 2013. Print.
Throughout history there have been many dystopian societies, societies with major flaws. In these societies actions occurred which caused harm to the citizens such as murder, destruction of property and other unfortunate consequences. These events are often portrayed in novels to point out the consequences of these societies. The novel Legend by Marie Lu contains events and situations based on historical occurrences such as World War II, North Korea and Tiananmen Square in order to point out societal flaws in real dystopian societies.
The word danger probably makes you want to turn away and stop doing whatever it is that you are doing. Well, what do you do when you see the words, “The Danger of a Single Story?” These words had me nervous about what I was going to be watching. However, there was a lot of information that was explained throughout this 20-minute TED talk from Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. This paper will explore compelling ideas she mentioned that relate to things I have experienced when I went to another culture, the risks of telling a single story narrative in intercultural interactions, ways to protect myself from single story misconceptions, and how I was able to see how a single story might affect the way I communicate with others in different cultures.
As an ignorant Western society, we use single stories as a way to educate others on cultures that we don’t even know about. They are the false pictures we have of foreign cultures that our societies