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The Natural History of Narratives: how stories evolve, survive & decay and die

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Andrew S. and 2 others
The Natural History of Narratives: how stories evolve, survive & decay and die

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All civil humans welcome!

Storytelling is a universal human behaviour and a unique characteristic of our species. This talk will begin by discussing how our capacity to imagine and share fictional worlds was central to the evolution of human sociality and culture, before turning to some of the recurrent themes and plots that are found in diverse traditions around the world.

Professor Tehrani will focus especially on so-called “international folktales”, which include such tales as Cinderella, Little Red Riding Hood, and Beauty and the Beast. He will show that cross-cultural patterns of continuity and variation in these folktales reflect basic evolutionary processes of mutation, selection, and inheritance as they get transmitted from generation to generation and spread into new “habitats”. He will also show how variations in the plots and characters of these stories can be analysed in a similar way to sequences of DNA, enabling us to reconstruct the deep history and dispersal of these traditions.

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Newcastle Skeptics
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Tyneside Irish Centre
43 Gallowgate, Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne and Wear NE1 4SG · Newcastle Upon Tyne
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