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narratives

Narratives are organized accounts of a sequence of events presented to an audience. They may be fictional or factual, oral or written, dramatic or documentary. In narrative theory, the events that occur are distinguished from the way they are told—the narration or narrative voice that shapes interpretation. A narrative typically has elements such as plot, characters, setting, and a point of view.

Forms span literature and beyond: novels, short stories, myths, legends, biographies, memoirs, news reports, films, and

Core components include plot, the sequence of events and their causal relations; characters; setting; and themes.

Functions of narratives include entertainment, conveying information, influencing beliefs, preserving memory, and exploring identity and culture.

video
games—each
uses
storytelling
conventions
to
structure
experience.
Narratives
can
be
linear
or
non-linear,
directed
by
a
narrator
or
by
focalization.
Narrative
techniques
involve
perspective
(first
person,
third
person),
voice,
and
tone,
as
well
as
devices
such
as
flashbacks,
foreshadowing,
in
medias
res,
frame
narratives,
and
metafiction.
In
scholarly
contexts,
narratology
studies
the
structure
and
function
of
narratives
across
media,
helping
to
explain
how
stories
affect
understanding,
empathy,
and
social
meaning.