Socrates

"The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing." 

Socrates

"To find yourself, think for yourself."

Nelson Mandela

"Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world."

Jim Rohn

"Success is nothing more than a few simple disciplines, practiced every day." 

Buddha

"The mind is everything. What you think, you become." 

Saturday, 7 May 2022

FORMS OF NARRATION

 

The assimilation of information and retelling it for the benefit of the readers or the listeners is called narration. It is the process of creating the narrative. Narration takes place through the medium of a narrative text initiated by a narrator

 

Narration is a way of representing our experience in a sequence.

A narrative is an account of events presented serially following a meaningful pattern.

 The selection and ordering of events into a meaningful pattern are the two most important factors for the success of a narrative.

 

A narrative with a beginning, middle and end. Narratives can be oral or written depending on the medium we use.

 

Biographies and autobiographies, news stories and features, T.V serials or a sports commentary, novels, thrillers and romances, advertisements and speeches and all manners of conversations have their distinct forms of narratives.

 

WHAT IS NARRATIVE

The word narrative is derived from the Latin word narrare, which means ‘to recount’ or ‘to tell’. Narrative isa tool for knowing as well as telling. It helps us to absorb knowledge as well as to express it in a systematic manner.

The word ‘story’ is often used as a synonym of ‘narrative’, but, strictly speaking, ‘story’ is used to refer to the sequence of events presented in a narrative.

Narrative is basically a recounting of something that happened at some earlier time, at a distance from the time of narration. Narrative focuses our attention to a story, a sequence of events or an episode through the direct mediation of a teller or a narrator.

 

Teller or Narrator

1.    Tale or Narrative

2.   Addressee

Narratives must have a sense of progression; they usually lead us from one stage to another, with some sort of development. They involve the recall of happenings witnessed by the teller of the narrative.

 

Narrative, is a series of events or  ‘action’. No narrative is possible without an event or an action. The absence of an event or an action makes a piece of writing a mere description, nothing else.

 

Narrative Point of View

1.    The First Person Narrative

 The first person narrative is used as a way of narrating an event directly as an omniscient narrator. He has an omniscient knowledge of time, people and places. In this type of narrative the narrator is also a character within his own story and narrates the story from his own point of view.

 

 It enables the narrator to convey the inner thoughts or the internal reactions of the characters.

 

The Sun also Rises by Ernest Hemingway uses the First Person Narrative mode.

 

2. The second person Narrative.

this mode of narrative the narrator refers to one of the characters as you and prompts the reader to believe that he is also a character in the narrative. This mode of narrative is used to create a sense of intimacy between the narrator and the reader.

 

3.  The third-person narrative

 

In this type of narrative each and every character is referred to as he, she, it or they and not as I or we or you . The narrator is never involved in the action of the narrative and narrates the episodes as an outsider or an onlooker. Third person singular, he/she is the most common type of the third-person narrative

 

Q ns

Define ‘ Narrative’

What are the two most important factors in a narrative What is Narrative Point of View?

 

 

VARIETIES OF NARRATION

The following forms of narration are generally used to transfer experience from one person to another through well  defined narrative structures:

1. poems

2. folktales

3. novels

4. short stories

5. films

6. essays

 7. newspaper reports

8. Advertisements

 

ELEMENTS OF NARRATION

Oral narrative of personal experience generally consists of the following six components:

 1. Abstract: What, in a nut shell, is the story about?

2. Orientation: Who, When, Where? What?

3. Complicating action: then what happened?

4. Evaluation: How is this interesting?

5. Resolution: What happened , finally?

6. Coda: Bringing back to the following situation..


Abstract: A narrative normally begins with an abstract. The title of a short story or the headline of a newspaper sketches the narrative in a nutshell and it may, therefore, be called the ‘abstract’ of the narrative.

Orientation: The orientation is often called the ‘setting’ of the narrative as it creates the spatiotemporal (

  1. belonging to both space and time or to space–time.)

setting of the story. It also creates the necessary environment which enhances the overall meaning of the narrative. 

The orientation introduces and identifies the participants in the action, the time, place and the initial behaviour. 

The orientation section provides answers to the questions— Who? When? Where? Sentences describing the persons involved in an action, the time and place of occurrence of the event are used in orientation.

Complicating action:  The complicating action normally constitutes the longest section of a narrative. In this section, the ordered events of the narrative are reported and the actions of the protagonists are described in great details to heighten the impact of the narrative.

Evaluation :The evaluation highlights the relevance of the narrative to the narrator or the reader. The resolution tells us what happened finally and provides a sense of completion.

 Coda: The coda brings the narrator and the listener or the reader to the point at which they entered the narrative. 

A moral or a lesson learnt by the narrator or the reader may be included in a coda.

All the six elements are not equally crucial in a narrative.

Depending on the nature of the narrative the narrator has the choice of highlighting some of these elements. The ordering of the elements may be altered by a skilful narrator.

Salient features of a narrative:

1. Narrative is an account of events

2. Narrative is a sequence of events

 3. Narrative follows a predetermined pattern

4. Narrative structure begins with a setting of a scene and introduction of characters in an initial situation

5. Narrative unfolds tension, conflict or mystery to be resolved later

 6. Narrative builds up climax.

 7. Narrative proceeds towards resolution.

 

REPORTABILITY AND CREDIBILITY OF A NARRATIVE

  • Narrative text
  • Reportability
  • Credibility

An event narrated in a text must satisfy the criteria of reportability and credibility. All events or all experiences are not worth reporting, and, therefore, the narrator has to decide if an event or an experience is worth reporting. Again, some events or actions are more reportable than others. The reportability or reliability of an action depends on the context and the relations of the narrators with the listeners or the readers. 

 Along with reportability, a narrative must have credibility, otherwise it will not be accepted by the readers or the listeners. The narrators or the writers must be very resourceful to bring in a sense of credibility in their narrative texts.

 

LINEAR AND NON-LINEAR NARRATIVE STRUCTURE

 When narrative proceeds smoothly in a straight line in a step-by step fashion is called a Linear narrative.

 Non-linear narrative is the opposite of a Linear structure as in this type of structure the narrative does not proceed in a straight line. The example of a nonlinear narrative structure is a story where the narrator narrates the story’s ending before the middle is finished.

 When a narrator narrates the events in a non-linear structure, that is, when he does not follow the sequence chronologically, he adds complexity to the plot of his narrative. 

The complex narrative structure often contain the following: 

1. flashback 

2. flash forwards 

3. repetition 

4. dream sequence 

5. different time frames 

6. backward story telling

Flashback: A flashback is a narrative technique in which a narrative presents a set of events that had occurred before the scenes immediately preceding it. 

Flash- forward: This technique is used to present a scene that takes the narrative forward in time from the current point of the narrative.

 Flashforward describes expected, projected or imagined events. or the reader to look at the story from different angles.

 

NARRATIVE PARAGRAPH 

Narrative paragraphs describe an experience. Sentences in a narrative paragraph may be arranged in several ways depending on the narrator’s purpose. Narrator can do it chronologically, according to time order.  While narrating the physical appearance of something,  it is however, not time that is important, it is space that matters. 


 But depending on the kind of the paragraph, the topic sentence may be in the middle or at the end of the paragraph. Points to Remember:

 1. Write a topic sentence with a strong controlling idea 

2. Arrange idea using chronological development 

3. Maintain coherence among the sentences

4. See that all the sentences are related to the topic sentence thematically. 

5. See that all the sentences support the controlling idea.

 

 DESCRIPTIVE OR EXPOSITORY PARAGRAPH 

While writing a descriptive or an expository paragraph the physical appearance of the thing described should be pointed out from the point of view of location. In this type of paragraph it is space that matters and this type of organization is called spatial organization. The topic sentence must be supported with details organized spatially. Descriptive writing uses sensory details to paint a picture of a place, a person, or an object and the controlling idea of a descriptive or expository paragraph is generally an attitude or an impression about the subject. Points to remember 

1. Organize ideas using spatial organization 

2. Use information or examples to support your topic sentence 

3. Arrange the sentences in a such a way that they support the main ideas 

4. Make it unified and coherent

Tuesday, 3 May 2022

SOCIAL MEDIA AND WOMEN

SOCIAL MEDIA AND WOMEN

 

EMPOWERING THE WOMEN THROUGH SOCIAL MEDIA- TECHNOLOGIES

 

THE DEVELOPMENT OF SOCIETY CAN BE IMPROVED IF WOMEN ARE EMPOWERED.

Communication is extremely important for womens development and Social Media plays significant role.

Role of social  media is important to empower women because it gives self reliance and there is a visible effect of media on every sphere of life.

 

It is reported that with access to internet at homes, women are using it for multiple purposes.  It has enabled women to participate in important daily affairs of state that ranges from household work to education, health and governance.

 

 

The development of social media technologies created various opportunities for the women population to plead their opinions in  a  social media platform to share, raise the voice of women when their voices are restricted and couldn't be bought out by the mainstream media

In the social media space, women can overtake from the deliberate male domination.

 

The  social media has an important role to play – to create awakening in women to achieve their potential as the prime movers of change in society.

 

REASON FOR ACTIVE PARTICIPATION OF WOMEN

 

 

Studies that analyze female leadership in the Internet, and particularly, in social apps.  Out that Pinterest and Instagram are two channels that have become mostly feminine, while Facebook comes in third.

 

We don't have a choice on  whether we do social media, the question is how well we do it"- Erik Qualman

Women's leadership in social networks can tear down old stereotypes and demographic categories, generating a real impact on media, advertisement and entertainment.  

Increase in Social Media Users in India

The data reveals that there were 448 million social media users in India in January 2021, and that the number of social media users in the country has significantly increased by 78 million between 2020 and 2021.

This means more than 32.3 percent of India's population is active on social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, WhatsApp and Instagram.

Video-streaming platform YouTube is the most popular platform in 2021. More than 85 percent of India's Internet users consume content on YouTube.

Followed by Facebook, which is used by 75 percent of the Indians.

While WhatsApp stands on the third position in popularity in India.

 

The ratio of male to female active Internet users is almost the same in rural and urban India.

About 57% of active Internet users in urban India are men and 43% are women.

In rural India, 58% of active Internet users are men and 42% are women.

 

About 96% of users access the internet for entertainment, while

90% use it for communication and

82% to access social media platforms. About

45% have made some form of online transaction and

28% regularly shop online



Women participate in social networks they can, for instance, upload photos on Instagram and at the same time “like” a post on Facebook and share a link on LinkedIn.

 Men, in contrast, have a more linear participation. “In general, they are more selective when engaging in conversations and tend to share similar-format content,”.

 

Another study reveals that  33% of women use Facebook as a way to communicate with friends and that 8 out of 10 prefer using social networks to connect better with others through chats.

Men mostly tend to compile information, check videos and create content, and prefer giving their opinion on different issues on Twitter.

 

 

While women tend to know the news, sales and discounts,

Men only follow them because they like them or because they identify with the brand but they do not engage in a relationship with the company that they are following.

 

Women, however, generate feedback; they give their opinion on products and participate in sweepstakes, among others.


To understand how social media can be used wisely to empower women in a conservative cultured society like India.

 

Women are very active on social media and they communicate naturally across them because they share similar communicative logic.

Women’s leadership in social networks can tear down old stereotypes and demographic categories, generating a real impact on media, advertisement and entertainment

 

Women are more active on social media; they use it more and participate more than men. This is why it is believed that they will mark trends from now on, since they have typically adapted more and better to the technology.

 

Social media has proven to be a powerful mechanism in bringing attention to women’s issues, galvanizing action worldwide and advocating to policy makers efficiently and effectively. 

By overcoming obstacles such as distance and geography, Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram have created a platform for awareness - local issues are able to become global concerns, and local activists become connected with global citizens. 

Increasing female leadership in media organizations can ensure that advocacy is able to influence both decision-making processes and public awareness on key women’s rights issues

SOCIAL MEDIA IN EMPOWERING WOMEN

 



 

Impact Of Social Media On Indian Women

India has a population of 1.2 billion people, with women accounting for roughly half of the population. Today, technology directly impacts women's development and has enabled their voice to reach out and be viewed . Today, technology directly impacts women's development and has enabled their voice to reach out and be viewed globally.

 According to a recent Goggle report, the Internet is empowering Indian women by providing them with easy access to information and allowing them to make more educated decisions in their daily lives.

The Social Media Revolution And Women's Empowerment

Activists all over the world have used platforms like YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter to broadcast live events to a large online audience. Women's rights organisations have also jumped on board to take use of social media's unmatched political and awareness-raising potential. The rise of female bloggers has helped to attract a younger generation of activists, who are a major target audience for breaking down preconceptions and advancing gender equality.
Political participation

In many parts of the world, social media platforms have helped the discourse around the toxic implications of sexualised power gain momentum in the recent years


The Wikigender online conversation and study identified three areas where social media has aided women's political activism:

After the 2012 gang rape and subsequent death of a young Delhi physiotherapy student, the hashtag #DelhiGangRape brought gender-based violence in India into the spotlight. The hashtag campaign brought into effect public street mobilization, resulting in the government introducing specific anti-rape provisions in the Criminal code. The success of this protest has been largely credited to the use of Facebook, Twitter and other social media sites, which allowed people all over the world to express their frustration and have their voice be heard.

Hashtag activism has helped to mobilize public attention on women's rights, increasing the visibility of issues that are under-reported in mainstream media. Example : The success of UN Women's high-profile #HeForShe campaign demonstrates the power of social media to reach new and wider audiences: the campaign reached over 1.2 billion people worldwide, highlighting the necessity to involve men and boys to attain gender equality.

 

 

 

Another example of high profile cases of sexual assault such as those in the #MeToo movement, along with subsequent media attention and overwhelming condemnation of abuse, has transformed a previously unacknowledged topic, one that was spoken of in whispers or euphemisms if even discussed at all, to one of global interest and reach. 

 

Social Media Activism

Cyber-activism is a growing field among activist. The people those who have use internet and initiate various activities like demonstrations, public protests etc. Social media technologies have been widely used to spread information in a short time. People indulge in social media to form a network in order to socialize themselves and stay connected with other people. The message once passed or posted reaches many.


 

Women Protests Via Social Media

Women To Drive

On May 2011 Manal al-sharif posted a video on online showing herself driving. This could sound very normal thing for any other women in the western or in eastern countries. But, Manal was imprisoned as women of Iran are totally restricted from driving. A hashtag #Women2Drive Campaign in Facebook, Twitter and Youtube got viral which influenced Manal to video herself driving. That video was viewed more than 700,000 times before it was removed from Youtube.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XAA8LOWEY9Y




My Silent Freedom

In 2014 an Iranian Journalist Masih Alinejad posted a picture in online which showed her in free hair, breeze ruffling her hair gently. The photo became viral in social media. It provoked an instant reaction among the women in her country. The reason was she was not wearing a hijab, a headscarf to cover the entire head and hair. She named the picture as My Silent Freedom, which turned out to be a Facebook page receiving 770,000 likes and majority of the likes were from Iran internet users. Somehow later Iran women started to upload their pictures in this page without wearing a hijab. Alinejad received a human rights award at the Geneva Summit. She commented on her action as It's not about a headscarf, Its' about human dignity.

https://www.deccanchronicle.com/sunday-chronicle/shelf-life/190818/mission-impossible-made-possible.html

 


What is Women Will Web platform?

Launched in 2015, the Google For India event has been helping Indian society to grow in multiple ways possible including the Internet Saathi program with TATA Trust. Based on learnings from the Internet Saathi program, Google has launched the Women Will web platform. This will be complemented by community support, mentorship and accelerator programs for rural women entrepreneurs. Through this Google For India aims to support women in rural areas of the country to pursue their ambitions and improve their livelihoods through entrepreneurship.

 

Social media can also be a useful resource for entrepreneurs to learn new skills that will benefit their businesses. These benefits are derived even by small-scale businesses in conflict zones.

 In Kashmir, for instance, many women use social media to promote the products they make in their informal, home-based enterprises—such as jewellery, Kashmiri craft, and textiles. According to the president of the Kashmir Chamber of Commerce and Industry, there are approximately 4,000 women-led online businesses in the Kashmir Valley.

According to the Women’s World Banking Report 2019, women micro-entrepreneurs in India reported using WhatsApp to communicate with customers and vendors.[  Other than WhatsApp, women entrepreneurs in India also use platforms such as Facebook, Instagram and YouTube to expand networks and make new connections:

98 percent use Facebook for their business,

 94 percent use WhatsApp, and

 7 percent use Instagram.[28] 

The study also found that 71 percent of the women who are more likely to use social media for their business and business-related communication, were the sole decision-makers for their businesses.


Twitter’s survey of some 522,992 tweets from 10 cities in India, conducted between January 2019 and February 2021,

 indicated that for 24.9 percent of Indian women, the most popular subjects of conversation are

 on individual passion points like books and entertainment,

 followed by current affairs, celebrations, finding camaraderie and support, and

 social issues.

The same survey found that about

20.8 percent of Indian women on Twitter used the platform to stay informed of local and international news; and

11.7 percent of them, to find like-minded peers by utilising the power of hashtags.

 Meanwhile, 6.9 percent of Indian women tweeted about their daily lives,[c]

 and around 4.2 percent engaged in personal conversations around topics like romantic relationships and mental health.[22]

 

 

 

Figure 3. Age-wise female Facebook users in India (%)

Source: Data from Facebook Audience Insights (as of 6 March 2021)

                  In India, there are around 50 Crore Internet users. It is growing at a rate of 10% per year in the urban areas and 13% per year in the rural areas. Similarly, one-third of internet users in India are women. Today, a person spends an average of 145 minutes every day on social media. These platforms have a significant degree of influence on people’s political, social, and economic lives. Here too, a major part of users are women. Thus, is it important to find out, how seriously these platforms are dealing with gender issues including representation, safety, and security? Why access to Social media is important for women:

Initially, social media used to be a medium of entertainment or chatting and interaction within a closed group of friends. However, now social media provides immense opportunities and benefits in social, political, and economical domains. It has also become a golden opportunity for women in traditional families who are not able to step outside their homes.

  • Building Interpersonal Relationships: Social Media allows users to build social capital and nurture interpersonal relationships. More than two-thirds of the youth in India use social media to stay in touch with their families and friends. Thus, it provides women not going outside their home an opportunity to interact with people all our the world. It improves their self-confidence and self-esteem.
  • Awareness and Information sharing:  Unlike in traditional media, the content on social media also, is created by users. The platforms are not just for broadcasting, but more for being avenues for dialogue.
    • A recent Twitter survey showed 25% of Indian women have a keen interest in discussing books and entertainment over social media. 
  • Economic Benefits: Social media provides scope for women-owned businesses to increase their growth and access formal financial services. 
    • It allows women to conduct their business online, thus eliminating the need for investment in physical spaces. 
    • It also paves the way for better engagement with other businesses, closer customer interaction, and more efficient responses to customer feedback.
    • According to the Women’s World Banking Report 2019, many women micro-entrepreneurs in India use WhatsApp to communicate with customers and vendors.
  • Addressing Grievances: These platforms also act as a forum for many women to garner support in solidarity, against their sufferings. 
    • For instance, The ‘Me Too’ movement against sexual harassment gained worldwide popularity through Twitter beginning in 2017. Under this, the survivors shared their sexual harassment experiences on social media.
    • Similarly, Indian women launched a campaign on Twitter, with the help of the hashtag “LahuKaLagaan”. It was against the 12 percent tax on sanitary napkins. The government rolled back the tax after the social media outrage.

Numerous steps have already been taken for improving women’s safety over online platforms to allow them to reap the potential benefits.

Obstacles for women in accessing social media:

However, it is nothing like that all women have access to social m

According to a research study conducted by Newzoo, today nearly 46% of all gamers are women.

However, female representation in the gaming industry is still lacking. According to a survey conducted by the First-20 group, women only occupy 16% of senior management positions at leading gaming companies. T

From cinema scenarios to the landscapes of familiar offices – women dominating in the department of Social Media Marketing seems to be a notable trend. And though the ratio difference is not extreme (varying by specific job title) in a working world where the percentage of full time employees that are women is only 44% in the United States, 

 The woman who uses social media as a ‘digital business card’

“I always say that I utilize social media, in particular Instagram, as an extension of my business card. The first thing I do as a consumer is go to a company’s Instagram feed and check them out. In my opinion, it doesn’t really matter how many people follow you, or how many likes you get; what matters is taking the time and effort to create engaging, original content that fits your brand. Social media has been fundamental in growing our Scooteroma business. Our vespa tour of Rome is such a dynamic activity that it’s easy and natural for our clients (and me) to share this authentic Roman experience with a photo or video. And as an added bonus, our Instagram account has become a platform for press, journalists, publications, and bloggers to find us.”