yuzhet
Yuzhet is a term used primarily in Russian literary and film theory to refer to the chronological sequence of events in a narrative. The concept was first introduced by Viktor Shklovsky in the early twentieth century and has since become a central element of Russian structural analysis. Yuzhet represents the story as it would unfold if it were told in a strictly linear, time‑ordered fashion, encompassing all moments that occur within the world of the narrative. It is the “what happens” part of a story, as opposed to the “how it is told.”
In contrast, the term fabula denotes the logical, thematic, or emotional organization of the narrative as experienced
The yuzhet/fabula distinction helps scholars analyze storytelling techniques. By mapping a narrative onto both frameworks, analysts
Beyond literary criticism, yuzhet informs studies in media, cultural anthropology, and cognitive science. Scholars use it