Narrative Theory - 2010
Narrative Theory - 2010
Narrative Theory - 2010
Narrative Theory
Story is the irreducible substance of a story (A meets B, something happens, order returns), while narrative
is the way the story is related (Once upon a time there was a princess...)"
Key Concepts in Communication - Fiske et al (1983)
While the term ‘narrative’ certainly is not used as commonly as ‘story’, most people know that it refers, in
some way, to stories.
‘It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking
thirteen.’
Openings
Openings are important. They are usually intended
to grab and hold the attention of the receiver of the
text. People will walk out of the cinema, turn over
the TV station and abandon a novel if it doesn’t
capture the attention immediately.
The extract is from George Orwell’s Nineteen
Eighty-four. What makes this sentence intriguing is
that the clocks strike ‘thirteen’. This immediately
sets up a puzzle or an ENIGMA CODE as Barthes
would call it.
We would probably expect a science fiction style
narrative (the novel was written in 1949 and is an
alarming vision of a time and place where the world
has different rules.)
Openings
In media studies, the opening of any film/TV show
has to orientate the audience quickly, giving them
unambiguous signs about such things as:
Who is the hero and the villain (using realistic or
believable characters or ‘types’ of characters)
A recognisable setting
An understandable style
A conventional narrative structure which includes
cause-effect motivation.
The teenage girls are having ‘harmless’ fun Vs. the young woman
who is hiding important information = Innocence vs. Evil
The idea that we cannot conceive the concept of ‘good’ without the
presence of ‘bad’ with which to compare it to and therefore define it
against.
24 impending destruction.
The policewoman holding the gun in the darkened
street – unknown danger
The family unit – is all as it seems?
The split screen depicting various characters and
their activities during this 1 hour in the life of…
The senator’s security man on the phone with Mrs.
Palmer and David Palmer in the background – sense
of foreboding created through the telephone
conversation.
Kim and her friend being chased by two teenagers –
what is their motive?
The mystery woman and mystery man – who are
they? Are they baddies?
The seemingly beautiful man on the plane - who is
he?
Enigma Codes (puzzles we want solved) are
established through: