The formal academic study of stories and storytelling is called
narratology. Some theorists of
narratology have attempted to isolate the quality or set of properties that distinguishes narrative from non-narrative writings:
narrativity. The strategies an author or other storyteller uses to build a story are called
narrative techniques or narrative devices, a vast number of which scholars have identified. Examples of narrative techniques include having characters inside a story present another story: a nested narrative or
story within a story. Another is the use of an
unreliable narrator, a viewpoint
character often found in certain genres like
noir fiction, whose telling of the plot is presented suspiciously, in an unbelievable or doubtful way.
Human nature Owen Flanagan of Duke University, a leading consciousness researcher, writes, "Evidence strongly suggests that humans in all cultures come to cast their own identity in some sort of narrative form. We are inveterate storytellers." Stories are an important aspect of culture. Many works of art and most works of literature tell stories; indeed, most of the
humanities involve stories. As noted by Owen Flanagan, narrative may also refer to psychological processes in self-identity, memory, and
meaning-making.
Semiotics begins with the individual building blocks of
meaning called
signs;
semantics is the way in which signs are combined into
codes to transmit messages. This is part of a general
communication system using both verbal and non-verbal elements, and creating a discourse with different
modalities and forms. In
On Realism in Art,
Roman Jakobson attests that literature exists as a separate entity. He and many other semioticians prefer the view that all texts, whether spoken or written, are the same, except that some authors
encode their texts with distinctive
literary qualities that distinguish them from other forms of discourse. Nevertheless, there is a clear trend to address literary narrative forms as separable from other forms. This is first seen in
Russian Formalism through
Victor Shklovsky's analysis of the relationship between composition and style, and in the work of
Vladimir Propp, who analyzed the plots used in traditional folk-tales and identified 31 distinct functional components. This trend (or these trends) continued in the work of the
Prague School and of French scholars such as
Claude Lévi-Strauss and
Roland Barthes. It leads to a structural analysis of narrative and an increasingly influential body of modern work that raises important theoretical questions: • What is
text? • What is its role (
culture)? • How is it manifested as art, cinema, theater, or literature? • Why is narrative divided into different
genres, such as poetry,
short stories, and novels?
Literary theory In literary theoretic approach, narrative is being narrowly defined as fiction-writing mode in which the narrator is communicating directly to the reader. Until the late 19th century,
literary criticism as an academic exercise dealt solely with poetry (including
epic poems like the
Iliad and
Paradise Lost, and poetic drama like
Shakespeare). Most
poems did not have a narrator distinct from the author. But novels, lending a number of voices to several characters in addition to narrator's, created a possibility of narrator's views differing significantly from the author's views. With the rise of the novel in the
18th century, the concept of the narrator (as opposed to "author") made the question of narrator a prominent one for literary theory. It has been proposed that perspective and interpretive knowledge are the essential characteristics, while focalization and structure are lateral characteristics of the narrator. The role of literary theory in narrative has been disputed; with some interpretations like
Todorov's narrative model that views all narratives in a cyclical manner, and that each narrative is characterized by a three part structure that allows the narrative to progress. The beginning stage being an establishment of equilibrium—a state of non conflict, followed by a disruption to this state, caused by an external event, and lastly a restoration or a return to equilibrium—a conclusion that brings the narrative back to a similar space before the events of the narrative unfolded. The school of literary criticism known as
Russian formalism has applied methods that are more often used to analyse narrative fiction, to non-fictional texts such as political speeches. Other critiques of literary theory in narrative challenge the very role of literariness in narrative, as well as the role of narrative in literature. Meaning, narratives, and their associated aesthetics, emotions, and values have the ability to operate without the presence of literature, and vice versa. According to Didier Costa, the structural model used by Todorov and others is unfairly biased toward a Western interpretation of narrative, and that a more comprehensive and transformative model must be created in order to properly analyze narrative discourse in literature. Framing also plays a pivotal role in narrative structure; an analysis of the historical and cultural contexts present during the development of a narrative is needed in order to more accurately represent the role of narratology in societies that relied heavily on oral narratives.
Aesthetics approach Narrative is a highly aesthetic art. Thoughtfully composed stories have a number of aesthetic elements. Such elements include the idea of
narrative structure, with identifiable beginnings, middles, and ends, or the process of exposition-development-climax-denouement, with coherent plot lines; a strong focus on temporality including retention of the past, attention to present action, and future anticipation; a substantial focus on character and characterization, "arguably the most important single component of the novel" (
David Lodge The Art of Fiction 67); different voices interacting, "the sound of the human voice, or many voices, speaking in a variety of accents, rhythms, and registers" (Lodge
The Art of Fiction 97; see also the theory of
Mikhail Bakhtin for expansion of this idea); a narrator or narrator-like voice, which "addresses" and "interacts with" reading audiences (see
Reader Response theory); communicates with a
Wayne Booth-esque rhetorical thrust, a dialectic process of interpretation, which is at times beneath the surface, forming a plotted narrative, and at other times much more visible, "arguing" for and against various positions; relies substantially on the use of literary tropes (see
Hayden White,
Metahistory for expansion of this idea); is often intertextual with other literatures; and commonly demonstrates an effort toward
Bildungsroman, a description of identity development with an effort to evince
becoming in character and community.
Psychological approach Within
philosophy of mind, the
social sciences, and various clinical fields including medicine, narrative can refer to aspects of human psychology. A personal narrative process is involved in a person's sense of
personal or
cultural identity, and in the creation and construction of
memories; it is thought by some to be the fundamental nature of the
self. The breakdown of a coherent or positive narrative has been implicated in the development of
psychosis and
mental disorders, and its repair said to play an important role in journeys of
recovery.
Narrative therapy is a form of
psychotherapy. Illness narratives are a way for a person affected by an illness to make sense of his or her experiences. In other words, language use in self-narratives accurately reflects human personality. The linguistic correlates of each Big Five trait are as follows: •
Extraversion - positively correlated with words referring to humans, social processes, and family; •
Agreeableness - positively correlated with family, inclusiveness, and certainty; negatively correlated with anger and body (that is, few negative comments about health or body); •
Conscientiousness - positively correlated with achievement and work; negatively related to body, death, anger, and exclusiveness; •
Neuroticism - positively correlated with sadness, negative emotion, body, anger, home, and anxiety; negatively correlated with work; •
Openness - positively correlated with perceptual processes, hearing, and exclusiveness
Social-sciences approaches Human beings often claim to understand events when they manage to formulate a coherent story or narrative explaining how they believe the event was generated. Narratives thus lie at the foundations of our cognitive procedures and also provide an explanatory framework for the social sciences, particularly when it is difficult to assemble enough cases to permit statistical analysis. Narrative is often used in
case study research in the social sciences. Here it has been found that the dense, contextual, and interpenetrating nature of social forces uncovered by detailed narratives is often more interesting and useful for both social theory and social policy than other forms of social inquiry. Research using narrative methods in the social sciences has been described as still being in its infancy but this perspective has several advantages such as access to an existing, rich vocabulary of analytical terms: plot, genre, subtext, epic, hero/heroine,
story arc (e.g., beginning–middle–end), and so on. Another benefit is it emphasizes that even apparently non-fictional documents (speeches, policies, legislation) are still fictions, in the sense they are authored and usually have an intended audience in mind. Sociologists Jaber F. Gubrium and James A. Holstein have contributed to the formation of a constructionist approach to narrative in sociology. From their book The Self We Live By: Narrative Identity in a Postmodern World (2000), to more recent texts such as Analyzing Narrative Reality (2009) and Varieties of Narrative Analysis (2012), they have developed an analytic framework for researching stories and storytelling that is centered on the interplay of institutional discourses (big stories) on the one hand, and everyday accounts (little stories) on the other. The goal is the sociological understanding of formal and lived texts of experience, featuring the production, practices, and communication of accounts.
Inquiry approach In order to avoid "hardened stories", or "narratives that become context-free, portable, and ready to be used anywhere and anytime for illustrative purposes" and are being used as
conceptual metaphors as defined by linguist
George Lakoff, an approach called
narrative inquiry was proposed, resting on the epistemological assumption that human beings make sense of
random or complex multicausal experience by the imposition of story structures. Human propensity to simplify data through a predilection for narratives over complex
data sets can lead to the
narrative fallacy. It is easier for the human mind to remember and make decisions on the basis of stories with meaning, than to remember strings of data. This is one reason why narratives are so powerful and why many of the classics in the humanities and social sciences are written in the narrative format. But humans can read meaning into data and compose stories, even where this is unwarranted. Some scholars suggest that the narrative fallacy and other biases can be avoided by applying standard methodical checks for
validity (statistics) and
reliability (statistics) in terms of how data (narratives) are collected, analyzed, and presented. More typically, scholars working with narrative prefer to use other evaluative criteria (such as believability or perhaps interpretive validity) since they do not see statistical validity as meaningfully applicable to qualitative data: "the concepts of validity and reliability, as understood from the positivist perspective, are somehow inappropriate and inadequate when applied to interpretive research". Several criteria for assessing the validity of narrative research was proposed, including the objective aspect, the emotional aspect, the social/moral aspect, and the clarity of the story.
Mathematical-sociology approach In mathematical sociology, the theory of comparative narratives was devised in order to describe and compare the structures (expressed as "and" in a
directed graph where multiple causal links incident into a node are conjoined) of action-driven sequential events. Narratives so conceived comprise the following ingredients: • A finite set of state descriptions of the world S, the components of which are weakly ordered in time; • A finite set of actors/agents (individual or collective), P; • A finite set of actions A; • A mapping of P onto A; The structure (
directed graph) is generated by letting the nodes stand for the states and the directed edges represent how the states are changed by specified actions. The action skeleton can then be abstracted, comprising a further digraph where the actions are depicted as nodes and edges take the form "action
a co-determined (in context of other actions) action
b". Narratives can be both abstracted and generalised by imposing an
algebra upon their structures and thence defining
homomorphism between the algebras. The insertion of action-driven causal links in a narrative can be achieved using the method of Bayesian narratives.
Bayesian narratives Developed by
Peter Abell, the theory of Bayesian narratives conceives a narrative as a
directed graph comprising multiple causal links (social interactions) of the general form: "action
a causes action
b in a specified context". In the absence of sufficient comparative cases to enable statistical treatment of the causal links, items of evidence in support and against a particular causal link are assembled and used to compute the Bayesian likelihood ratio of the link. Subjective causal statements of the form "I did
b because of
a" and subjective
counterfactuals "if it had not been for
a I would not have done
b" are notable items of evidence. ==In music==