The New Republic opens windows into narrative -- first, there's Robert Reich, arguing that America is built on four (count 'em) stories, and that the key to success for the Democratic Party is to reclaim at least some of them from the Republicans.
This actually isn't as bad as it sounds in the short retelling. Four narratives are better than two, which if I remember correctly is where George Lakoff left off. More detail -- more approaches -- means better strategy, at least up to a point. Reich is also far more willing to engage on the policy level -- he doesn't just deal in phrasing (or framing). But I'm not sure his "Mob at the Gates" strategy (create GATO, the Global Anti-Terrorist Organization) exactly makes it. His "Rot at the Top" approach is more promising -- assuming economic collapse, or some other form of assistance.
Of course, there may be more than four American narratives. For example, he seems to leave out the one about the White Whale...
Nevertheless, worth a look.
Better is Lee Siegel's takedown of the Ashley Smith-Brian Nicholls story, as converted into a morality play by CNN:
Prostitution is legalized in two places in America: in Nevada and on the airwaves. One of the biggest whorehouses is CNN (you don't expect integrity from Fox), which swung into action. The print media kept its cool and reported what seemed like Smith's remarkable grace under pressure with equal composure and reported her hints that she was an angel sent by God--Nichols himself told her, she assured reporters, who repeated it again and again, like a character reference--with skeptical detachment. In the newspapers, her narrative of sin and redemption was the story told by a hostage about how she saved herself. On television, it was the reason why she was saved. CNN proceeded to thrust before the cameras evangelical pastors, ministers, and even a rabbi claiming that Smith's use of Christian sentiments to save her life was proof of God's grace and divine intervention.
Never mind that Nichols himself had gone to a Catholic school and had been a religious man, very active in his local church, where he played the organ. Paula Zahn, the Xaviera Hollander of this particular story, blathered on about The Purpose Driven Life as if it had caused her own conversion...
On her show, Zahn endorsed the idea of a benevolent orchestration of four murders leading to many blessed hours and days of crowd-pleasing coverage like this: "For those who believe God works in mysterious ways, Ashley Smith and Brian Nichols will long remain a case in point, but the legions of those who have been touched by Rick Warren's teachings will not be surprised." This wasn't really a cynical attempt to appeal to the Christian right, who we are told now have the country's destiny in their hands and must be courted. It was an attempt to win the viewership of some of those "legions" who read Warren's book--a delicious demographic of 20 million...
One effect of the media's endorsement of this evangelical fantasy was to make the murder of four people inconsequential, or at least incidental to the happy unfolding of this story, which now included four possible book deals, a movie project, and a job offer from a hostage-negotiation firm for Ashley Smith...
But the main result of supporting the ideas of this religious-seeming crew was to legitimize the notion that a judge, a court employee, and two law-enforcement people were sacrificed for the sake of a divine arrangement...
Being by this point quite warmed up, he does go on...
Check it out. Step lively. And watch the closing story forms...
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