Asking questions to tell a story
I approach my work from a storytelling perspective; I let my story dictate the work, not the other way around. For instance, if I am starting a project, I’ll ponder or even write down a series of who, what, where, when, why, and how questions:
- What data do we have? Is it enough?
- Where do we get more?
- How do we get more?
- What blockers prevent us from getting more?
- How often will we need more?
But this is a different kind of project. We want to gain deeper insights into a piece of text than we might gather through reading. Even after reading a whole book, most people can’t memorize the relationships that are described in the text, and it would likely be a faulty recollection anyway. But we should have questions such as these:
- Who is mentioned in the text?
- Who do they know?
- Who are their adversaries?
- What are the themes of this text?
- What emotions are present?
- What places are mentioned...