Storytelling

English 1110
Section 01
Semester
Spring
Year
2025
Nancy West
Tuesday
Thursday
12:30-1:45pm
Course Description

Whether your major is Nuclear Engineering or Fisheries and Wildlife, we bet you’ve told at least one story today. Why? Because stories are vital to being human. As sci-fi writer Margaret Atwood puts it, “Storytelling is not a luxury to humanity; it’s almost as necessary as bread.” Storytelling is an urge we all have, but it’s also a skill to be honed. 

This course will help you develop your storytelling skills, which, on a practical level, can be vital to your profession. Imagine you’re a doctor having to tell a patient she’s seriously ill. What’s the best thing you can do in that instance? Tell a story of a patient who survived the illness. 

This course explores storytelling in big, broad ways, looking at some of its various histories, forms, meanings, and uses. It will also give you the fundamental tools to tell your own stories, whether they’re fictional, personal, or professional. As a course with a wide reach, “Storytelling” enlists the expertise of MU faculty from across campus, including Creative Writing, Digital Storytelling, Law, Medicine, and Political Science. Together, we’ll explore topics like the power of storytelling in politics, documentary storytelling, narrative medicine, comics, and Greek mythology. 

Class structure is a combination of a weekly lecture and discussion.