Narrative Machines

By: James Curcio: Artist / Author
  • Summary

  • A podcast on memetics, myth and propaganda: how our narratives define the limits of our political and personal identity, how any era of civilization may be consigned to myth just as it was defined by it. Drawing on over a decade of interdisciplinary research, this podcast examines how ideas spread through the internet, shaping perceptions, reshaping societal norms, and constructing identities and politics—often without conscious awareness.

    By analyzing the narratives we create, consume, and reinterpret, Narrative Machines offers a timely exploration of the influence of narratives, encouraging listeners to reflect on how myths shape their lives, both consciously and unconsciously.

    Previous drafts of many of these ideas were published in 2017 in Narrative Machines (Mythos Media), in 2020 in Masks: Bowie & Artists of Artifice (Intellect/ University of Chicago), and various web publications. It is presented here in audio format for the first time with additional reflections and editorial.

    For more of the author’s work in various mediums and formats, visit JamesCurcio.com

    You can also find more podcasts and articles about RPGs and collective storytelling at ModernMythology.net

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Episodes
  • Episode 1: Foundations
    Dec 12 2024

    This first episode of Narrative Machines argues that while we may call some stories myths and others not, all stories have the potential to become myths as they are repeated and embedded in our culture.

    We use the analogy of strange attractors to describe how myths function. Just as a strange attractor represents the underlying structure toward which a system tends to evolve, myths provide a framework for understanding and organizing our experiences. The episode connects this idea to Richard Dawkins' concept of memes, which are self-reproducing information structures analogous to genes. The episode argues that memes are not just silly pictures on the internet; they represent any idea that can become a social act and shape our beliefs and actions.

    Emphasizing the importance of moving beyond simplistic interpretations of myths and recognizing the complex ways they function in our lives, we introduce several key functions of myths:

    They inform the relationships between things.

    They define our identities, place in time, and roles in society.

    They arise from and bleed back into the material world, shaping history and the future.

    They serve as a selector for social mobility.

    They must be understood in the context of their use.

    They function as strange attractors.

    The episode concludes by emphasizing the immanence of myth and its role as a fundamental aspect of human experience. It calls for recognizing the power of myth in our lives and engaging with it critically and consciously.

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    34 mins

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