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japhyr · 2024-07-09 · Original thread
> Storytelling is personal. It is a connection between the writer and the reader. Without this personal connection, storytelling loses its purpose.

I read a book many years ago called If this is your land, where are your stories? One of the sections described how a group of native people from western Canada successfully reclaimed some of their land by telling stories in court. They lost their case in a lower court, because the court ruled that they were just telling stories. A higher court ruled that their people's stories, while not always factually correct, do lay claim to the land they lived on.

Everyone has a story. It's a confusing world where machine-generated stories can be indistinguishable from actual human stories.

Trust in authenticity is going to be a valuable asset going forward; I appreciate people sharing responses like this. It's easy to be cynical and say this response won't change anything, but if the people at Muse and companies like it keep getting these responses, some of them will realize the emptiness of what they're doing and move on to more meaningful work.

https://www.amazon.com/Where-Stories-Finding-Common-Ground/d...

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