This covers a loose worldwide history of story structure.
European and European Diaspora The first known treatise on story structure comes from
Aristotle's
Poetics. He advocated for a continuous two-act plot: δέσις (desis) and λύσις (lysis) which roughly translates to binding and unbinding, For this, he posts a proposed design for Miss. Burney Evelina on page 21. He presupposes that stories might have different shapes for those emotions. This leads to diagramming, later described by
Joseph Esenwein, who directly cited him, but argued that the diagram was supposed to be used only for short stories. He follows Selden Lincoln Whitcomb's recommendations and says that the parts are incident, emotion, crisis, suspense, climax, dénouement, conclusion. This diagram was copied and explained one for one by
Kenneth Rowe almost verbatim, in Kenneth Rowe's
Write That Play, though no credit was given to Joseph Esenwein. The plot structure was then used by Death of a Salesman author Arthur Miller. However, the coining for "Exposition" as the first part goes to earlier author, Rev. J.K. Brennan, who wrote his essay "The General Design of Plays for the book 'The Delphian Course'" (1912) for the
Delphian Society. Exposition, not Introduction nor "Incident" are used as the first part. This leads to
Percy Lubbock who wrote
The Craft of Fiction in 1921. He argued that there were too many story structures in the time period which made it harder to study academically, and thus proposed that conflict should be at the center of all stories, using such works as
War and Peace by
Leo Tolstoy. He also advocated for
Death of the Author in his work. He made a concentrated effort to look at conflict at the center of stories. Writers such as
E. M. Forster and
Virginia Woolf disagreed with him, the latter of which wrote in November 1923: "This is my prime discovery so far; & the fact that I've been so long finding it, proves, I think, how false Percy Lubbock's doctrine is--that you can do this sort of thing consciously." She went back and forth on the work throughout her life. She thus wrote some bits on their own treaties.
Gertrude Stein also later contributed to the general feel of stories by promoting
stream-of-consciousness and supported much of
Literary Modernism and looking at writing as a look into psychology. This was furthered by
Lajos Egri who advocated for using psychology to build characters in The Art of Dramatic Writing, published 1946. He also examines character through the lens of physiology, sociology and psychology. However, there was a rise in structuralism in the mid-to-late 20th century with such thinkers as
Roland Barthes,
Vladimir Propp,
Joseph Campbell, and
Northrop Frye, who often tried to find a unifying idea for story structure and how to academically study it. For example, Joseph Campbell tried to find one unifying story structure for myth, Roland Barthes further argued for the Death of the Author theory and Propp tried to find a story structure for Russian folktales. In Northrop Frye's
Anatomy of Criticism, he deals extensively with what he calls myths of spring, summer, fall, and winter: • Spring myths are
comedies, that is, stories that lead from bad situations to happy endings.
Shakespeare's
Twelfth Night is such a story. • Summer myths are similarly
utopian
fantasies such as
Dante's
Paradiso. • Fall myths are
tragedies that lead from ideal situations to disaster. Compare
Hamlet, Othello, and
King Lear and the movie
Legends of the Fall. • Winter myths are
dystopias; for example,
George Orwell's
1984,
Aldous Huxley's
Brave New World, and
Ayn Rand's novella
Anthem. In Frye's
Great Code, he offers two narrative structures for plots: • A U-shaped structure, that is, a story that begins with a state of equilibrium that descends to disaster and then upward to a new stable condition. This is the shape of a comedy. • An inverted U-shape structure, that is, a story in which the protagonist rises to prominence and descends to disaster. This is the shape of tragedy. Lajos Egri is then credited in Syd Field's last edition of
The Foundations of a Screenwriting published in 1979. The book argued for three acts, not five, and had no peak in the final diagram. This idea of a universal story structure fell out of favor with
poststructuralism. Theorists such as
Michel Foucault and
Jacques Derrida asserted that such universally shared, deep structures were logically impossible. At the same time that Literary
Structuralists rose with story structure, there were also
Postmodernism and
Post-postmodernism, which often argued about the nature of stories and what, if existing, story structures could be. Some authors, such as
John Gardner, advocated for the use of both, such as in
The Art of Fiction (1983). Ideas of this got shared over the next few decades, which lead to writers such as
Blake Snyder, who in
Save the Cat contributed language such as "Story Beats". == Categories ==