The world's storytelling renaissance began in Jonesborough, a tiny town in the mountains of Tennessee.
On a warm October day in 1973, the town of Jonesborough played host to the first National Storytelling Festival. The Festival was tiny, but something happened that October weekend that has changed forever our culture, this traditional art form, and this Tennessee town.
Now going into its 36th year, the National Storytelling Festival was created by Jimmy Neil Smith, a former journalism teacher and mayor of Jonesborough. His inspiration, quite simply, was a well-told tale heard over a car radioa story told by Grand Ole Opry star Jerry Clower about hunting in Mississippi. Why not a storytelling festival? Smith wondered.
The first National Storytelling Festival, the first of its kind anywhere in the world, ignited a renaissance of storytelling that is, even today, continuing to sweep the globe. People across America and the world are rediscovering the simplicity and basic truth of the told story.
Ancient storytelling traditions are being recognized and reborn. Storytelling organizations, festivals, and educational events now dot the globe, and the professional storyteller, a fixture in more primitive times and cultures, has re-appeared.
The autumn festival, held under colorful circus tents scattered throughout Jonesborough, now attracts over 10,000 visitors, and this first-of-its-kind event has become the flagship of this international revival of storytelling. Jonesborough, the festival's home, is recognized worldwide as the revival's birthplace.
Two years after the first festival, the National Storytelling Association was founded to spearhead America's storytelling renaissance. For almost a quarter of a century, NSA served as the connecting point for this storytelling revivalthe momentum behind this ever-widening movement.
Today, NSAnow known as the International Storytelling Centerpromotes the power of storytelling and the creative applications of this ancient tradition to enrich the human experience in the home, at the workplace, and within the world community.
Just as the first National Storytelling Festival gave birth almost 36 years ago to a quiet revolution felt across the globe, we expect that over the next 30 years and beyond the work of the International Storytelling Center will help transform our worldmaking a meaningful difference in the lives of individuals and families, corporations and institutions, and communities and cultures everywhere.