logo ingles

Menú lateral

Language

  • Español (ES)
  • English (UK)
  • Basque (eu)
  • Català (CA)
  • Galicia (gl)

Upcoming events

Sat Jul 19
Una Provincia de Cuento 2025
Sat Jul 19 @21:00 - 12:00PM
XXVI Verano de Cuento – El Sauzal
Tue Jul 22
Cuentos a la luz de la luna 2025
Wed Jul 23
Cuentos a la luz de la luna 2025
Thu Jul 24
Una Provincia de Cuento 2025

Redes Sociales

El Aedo

AEDO8 portada

Members access

Remember Me
  • Forgot your username?
  • Forgot your password?

Monthly newsletter

What is it?
Suscribe
feed-image Stay up to date with AEDA

FEST member

FEST

IGP Seal

BPI Eng

Condiciones de uso

Política de cookies

Protección de Datos de Carácter Personal

  • Home
  • Association
    • About us
    • How to be a member
    • Members
  • News and documents
  • Resources
    • Reflect Upon Storytelling
    • Links to resources
    • Files with resources
  • Media
    • Video
    • Photos
  • Agenda
  • Contact

Utilizamos cookies de terceros para realizar análisis de uso y de medición de nuestra web para mejorar nuestros servicios. Si continúas navegando, consideramos que aceptas su uso.

Puedes consultar nuestra Política de Cookies pinchando en más información, en la que además encontrarás la forma de configurar tu navegador web para el uso de cookies. Más información

I agree

DECLARATION IN DEFENCE OF BUDGETS THAT ALLOW FOR THE PROVISION OF REASONABLE PAYMENTS FOR OUR WORK

Empty
  •  Print 
  • Email
Details
24 June 2025
Hits: 125

Spanish / Catalan / Galician / Basque

mani ing

The associations AEDA, ANIN, LA FAULA, GNOA, MANO and NOGA, and all the storytellers constituting their membership, publicly express dissatisfaction with the practically years-long freeze in the budgets allocated to storytelling sessions and events in many of the public libraries in which we work.

Telling stories live before an audience requires effort and a great deal of preparation, ranging from the selection of stories and the narrative resources to make each story compelling, to the handling of often complex situations when working with dozens of people of differing ages and interests.

Professional storytelling is a demanding occupation. It requires continuous training over and above the years of experience gained through working in schools, libraries, theatres and public spaces before very different audiences in a wide variety of contexts. For that reason we believe fair remuneration is necessary, in order to allow us to meet the costs involved in our profession.

Those of us performing in libraries are engaged in artistic work rooted in tradition. Storytelling, when carried out professionally, is a relatable, stimulating activity which is highly valued by all audiences, whether they be babies, schoolchildren, teens or adults. 

As self-employed professionals we pay our dues with respect to the social security system, income tax, and civil liability insurance, while in addition we bear many other associated costs, such as a vehicle or transport, living expenses while working away, and administrative costs. We recommend that you read this article, which explains everything in more detail. 

To put this declaration into context, it should be noted that since 2020 the Consumer Price Index (CPI) has increased by almost 20% (see here) while the Interprofessional Minimum Wage has increased by some 50%. In some libraries and institutions running reading promotion campaigns, fees for storytelling professionals have not only not increased accordingly, but have remained virtually unchanged for years. This article on “How to Create a Storytelling Budget” may shed some light in that regard. 

We also believe that on many occasions there is a justifiable grievance when compared to other cultural, sporting or leisure activities which enjoy fairer budgetary provisions. 

For all of the above, storytellers throughout Spain urge those responsible for allocating and approving budgets, and those planning activities in public institutions, to give our craft and expertise the respect we believe it deserves, just as the public does.

 

This declaration is signed by all the storytelling associations in Spain:  AEDA, Spanish Professional Oral Tradition Association. – ANIN, Storytelling Association (Catalonia) – LA FAULA, Catalan Professional Oral Tradition Association, GNOA, Andalusian Oral Tradition Guild – MANO, Madrid Oral Tradition Association – NOGA, Galician Oral Tradition Collective.

Earth Story tellers: Stars in the Darkness 

Empty
  •  Print 
  • Email
Details
29 December 2020
Hits: 3269

It is said to be a dark moment for the planet, as the earth is heating up as global warming becomes a reality. Forests are burning down and as they turn to ash, they take with them stories of ancient trees and of all the flora y fauna that live in these ecosystems. And the voice of the icebergs ring out with an urgent tone; they are melting away and as they do so countless stories that have been locked within the frozen ice, since remote times, are released.

And, I ask myself, is there anyone out there willing to tell these stories? Is there a public out there, ready to listen to these stories? Who is listening to the obituaries of the people in the cultures that are disappearing before our eyes? Where are the people to assist the funerals of the extinct species who disappear off the face of the earth every day? If there is no one to tell and listen to these stories, then it is indeed, a dark moment for the planet.

It is also said that we need the darkness to see the stars and at this very moment, two lovely initiatives are shining brightly in this darkness: The Earth Stories Collection  and the global network of The Earth Story Tellers.

But, first of all, let me tell you how it all started … To do so, we need to travel in time and space to a dark, dark night and enter into a dream that Grian Cutanda, creator of the NGO the Avalon Project, had. It was a strange dream and initially the message was unclear. Little by little, the symbology of the dream started to reveal itself and transform into a real live dream: The Earth Story Collection project. The aims are to create a global bank of stories for the good of planet Earth and her inhabitants. It was inspired in a seed bank, but instead of plants seeds, the Earth Story Collection would collect “cultural seeds”, of myths, legends, fables, stories and other traditional tales from all around the world.

Read more ...

The Stary Night of Fairy Tales

Empty
  •  Print 
  • Email
Details
29 December 2020
Hits: 2306

Castellano

 

As far as we can discern, the sole purpose of human existence is to kindle a light in the darkness of mere being.

Carl Gustav Jung 

 

The species of Humanity comes from darkness, when night covered the earth, everything became threatening. Humans, sensitive beings, felt the cold on their naked bodies, and were afraid of the howls of wolfs and the snarls of beasts that wandered nearby their primitive shelters. 

As the first humans mastered the art of hunting to defend themselves and to feed off the animals they began to wear their skins to protect themselves from the cold. It was a treacherous and arduous time as they were at the mercy of the elements, and survival was a constant challenge with death always just around the corner. These fragile beings were able to succeed  thanks to their superior intelligence. 

In the dawn of human civilization there was an urge and desire to symbolize. Human beings discovered fire and created art, leaving behind works of great beauty in caves like Altamira. In those times, they would sit around the fire and tell stories, sharing their feelings and hopes. That eagerness to communicate, to talk about ourselves, and confide to another is one of the most powerful instincts of being human. 

Talking about oneself requires the ability to imagine and symbolize.  Thus,  from this urge to tell, human beings started to design and develop fictional stories,  under the splendorous stars that shone at night, guiding them as they walked blindly to their destination, in an uncertain fight for survival. 

Read more ...

More Articles ...

  1. Share to Connect: storytelling and visual language as a tool for system intervention
  2. AEDA RENOUNCES TO CONTINUE BEING A MEMBER OF FEST (Federation of European Storytelling).
  3. AEDA STATEMENT
  4. Inuit Journey
  5. European Storytelling Places. Starting point for crafting a european storytelling map
  6. DECALOGUE. STORYTELLING CONDITIONS
  7. ABOUT STORYTELLER TRAINING
Page 1 of 4
  • Start
  • Prev
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • Next
  • End

Language

  • Español (ES)
  • English (UK)
  • Basque (eu)
  • Català (CA)
  • Galicia (gl)

Upcoming events

Sat Jul 19
Una Provincia de Cuento 2025
Sat Jul 19 @21:00 - 12:00PM
XXVI Verano de Cuento – El Sauzal
Tue Jul 22
Cuentos a la luz de la luna 2025
Wed Jul 23
Cuentos a la luz de la luna 2025
Thu Jul 24
Una Provincia de Cuento 2025

Redes Sociales

El Aedo

AEDO8 portada

Members access

Remember Me
  • Forgot your username?
  • Forgot your password?

Monthly newsletter

What is it?
Suscribe
feed-image Stay up to date with AEDA

FEST member

FEST

IGP Seal

BPI Eng

Condiciones de uso

Política de cookies

Protección de Datos de Carácter Personal

©2025 AEDA | Web design: Joby Pérez