Narrative storyline (ie newspapers, films, tv, radio) is a
way of telling stories. Narrative sets out to show that what we experience when
we “read” a story
Verisimilitude – same location as us (i.e our location and time)
Linearity of cause (from start to finish, not in-between)
Enigma resolution
A high degree of narrative closure
A fictional world contains verisimilitude especially governed by spatial and temporal coherence
Todrov;
Stage 1: A point of
stable equilibrium, where everything is satisfied, calm and normal.
Stage 2: This
stability is disrupted by some kind of force, which creates a state of
disequilibrium.Stage 3: Recognition that a disruption has taken place.
Stage 4: It is only possible to re-create equilibrium through action directed against the disruption.
Stage 5: Restoration of a new state of equilibrium. The consequences of the reaction is to change the world of the narrative and/or the characters so that the final state of equilibrium in not the same as the initial state.
Roland Barthes
Establishment of plot
or theme. This is then followed by the development of the problem, an enigma,
an increase in tension. Finally comes the resolution of the plot.Such narratives
can be unambiguous and linear.
According to Kate
Domaille (2001)
every story ever told can be fitted into one of eight narrative types. Each of these narrative types has a source, an original story upon which the others are based. These stories are as follows: Achilles: The fatal flaw that leads to the destruction of the previously flawless, or almost flawless, person, e.g. Superman, Fatal Attraction.
Candide: The
indomitable hero who cannot be put down, e.g. Indiana Jones, James Bond, Rocky
etc. Cinderella: The dream
comes true, e.g. Pretty Woman. Circe: The Chase, the
spider and the fly, the innocent and the victim e.g. The Terminator. every story ever told can be fitted into one of eight narrative types. Each of these narrative types has a source, an original story upon which the others are based. These stories are as follows: Achilles: The fatal flaw that leads to the destruction of the previously flawless, or almost flawless, person, e.g. Superman, Fatal Attraction.
Faust: Selling your soul to the devil may bring riches but eventually your soul belongs to him, e.g. Devil’s Advocate, Wall Street.
Orpheus: The loss of something personal, the gift that is taken away, the tragedy of loss or the journey which follows the loss, e.g. The Sixth Sense, Born On the Fourth Of July.
Romeo And Juliet: The love story, e.g. Titanic.
Tristan and Iseult: The love triangle. Man loves woman…unfortunately one or both of them are already spoken for, or a third party intervenes, e.g. Casablanca.
The Russian theorist Vladimir Propp (1928)
Propp studied the narrative
structure of Russian Folk Tales. Propp concluded that
regardless of the individual differences in terms of plot, characters and
settings, such narratives would share common structural features. He also concluded
that all the characters could be resolved into only
seven character types in the 100 tales
he analyzed:
The villain —
struggles against the hero.
The donor — prepares the hero or gives the hero some magical object.
The (magical) helper — helps the hero in the quest.
The princess and her father — gives the task to the hero,identifies the false hero, marries the hero, often sought for during the narrative. Propp noted that functionally, the princess and the father can not be clearly distinguished.
The dispatcher — character who makes the lack known and sends the hero off.
The hero or victim/seeker hero — reacts to the donor, weds the princess.[False hero] — takes credit for the hero’s actions or tries to marry the princess.
When brought together
and broken down into their constitute parts these myths can be used to
formulate a universal monomyth that is essentially the condensed, basic hero
narrative that forms the basis for every myth and legend in the world and is,
therefore, common to all cultures.The donor — prepares the hero or gives the hero some magical object.
The (magical) helper — helps the hero in the quest.
The princess and her father — gives the task to the hero,identifies the false hero, marries the hero, often sought for during the narrative. Propp noted that functionally, the princess and the father can not be clearly distinguished.
The dispatcher — character who makes the lack known and sends the hero off.
The hero or victim/seeker hero — reacts to the donor, weds the princess.[False hero] — takes credit for the hero’s actions or tries to marry the princess.
Both George Lucas and Stephen Spielberg
Were both heavily
influenced by Campbell’s theories and Star
Wars conforms to Campbell’s model of
the Monomyth almost exactly.
Ordinary World – the ordered world that the hero will choose (or be forced) to abandon.
Call To Adventure – a
problem or challenge arises.Ordinary World – the ordered world that the hero will choose (or be forced) to abandon.
Refusal Of The Call –
fear or reluctance may strike the hero.
Meeting With The
Mentor – the mentor is a key character.
Crossing The First
Threshold – the hero commits to the adventure.
Test, Allies, Enemies
– the hero must learn the rules that will govern his quest.
Approach To The
Innermost Cave – the most dangerous confrontation yet, perhaps the location of
the treasure, or the object of the quest.
Ordeal – the hero
must face his fear or mortal enemy who will seem more powerful. Mental or
physical torture may occur.
Reward (Seizing The
Sword) – the hero can celebrate the victory.
The Road Back –
vengeful forces controlled by the villain are unleashed.
Resurrection –
perhaps a final confrontation with death.
Return With The
Elixir – return to the ordinary world with some wisdom, knowledge or something
else gained from the adventure.
These structures
are not unique to film but also advertising and news stories.
In fact the
structures presented are an integral part of the majority of both western and
eastern cultures - details how narrative works in society to inform the
audience of events, people, places through mediated ideologies within them.Narratives have a common structure Jonathan Culler (2001) describes narratology as comprising many strands
“implicitly united in
the recognition that narrative theory
requires a distinction between story, a
sequence of actions or events conceived as
independent of their manifestation in
discourse, and discourse, the
discursive presentation or narration of events.”
Structure is
different to theme – narrative presents the form in which the theme is
mediated/discussed.
Claude
Lèvi-Strauss (1958) his ideas;
narrative amount to
the fact that he believed all stories operated to certain clear Binary
Opposites e.g. good vs. evil, black vs. white, rich vs. poor etc.
The importance of
these ideas is that essentially a complicated world is reduced to a simple
either/or structure. Things are either right or wrong, good or bad. There is no
in between.
This structure has
ideological implications, if, for example, you want to show that the hero was
not wholly correct in what they did, and the villains weren’t always bad.
(Postmodernism?)
Levi-Strauss also
looked deeper into the way that narrative
were arranged in terms of themes within that
were ultimately always systematic
oppositions. The order of events
can be called the syntagmatic structure
of a narrative, but
Levi-Strauss was more
concerned with the deeper of
paradigmatic arrangement of themes.There is a choice of elements (paradigms) and they are arranged/dealt with in a particular way (syntagms).
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