Importance of Narrative
Miscellanea / / August 08, 2023
To communicate, the people They use different ways of saying and expressing themselves. And one of them is to communicate by narrating, which means doing it according to some characteristics in particular, what differentiates it from other "ways of saying". In a narrative, an event is told chronologically., that is to say, as it has happened through time, through which different actions have surely taken place that give shape to the fact or event in general.
For example, I want to say that today my work day was quite complicated: surely, I will start by saying that the bus was late and I was late, then I had some arguments with a co-worker, and finally, I had to stay to do extra work and I finished my workday much later than expected. due. This succession of actions, make up a fact in general: a bad day at work.
Now, I can tell this story orally, or I can also write it, and then it will be a written narrative. When some think of a "written narrative" they may imagine in a short story or a novel, that is, in a book, but in the Currently, anyone can make a story about any fact or event and publish it, for example, on their profile
Facebook.In general, the narrative has parts that make up its structure: a initial situation, where it is exposed who or who are the protagonists of the narration, where it happened, at what time, etc.; then, the knot or conflict, which is the part where most of the actions that will later give space to the Final status, where the outcome of the narrative. In narratives, the denouement or end can be euphoric (the classic "happy ending" of stories), when the protagonist manages to resolve the conflict of the knot and return to the initial situation, although sometimes transformed; or a dysphoric ending, when the protagonist surrenders to the conflicts of the knot, and is unable to overcome them.
In turn, the narratives can have different types of narrators, who have nothing to do with who the author of the story is. history. For example, she can present a protagonist narrator, who is the one who tells the story and in turn the one who lives it (narrated in the first person: me-we-us); omniscient narrator who knows and knows everything about the characters, what they live and what they feel (third person narrator he-she-they-they); witness narrator, knows the events, but not what the characters feel, and is not part of the story (both first person and third person narrator).
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