Are There Really Seven Types of Stories

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  • Опубликовано: 3 июл 2024
  • Are There Really Seven Types of Stories
    www.autocrit.com/blog/7-stori...
    Many academics, most notably author Christopher Booker, believe there are only seven basic narrative plots in all of storytelling - frameworks that are recycled again and again in fiction but populated by different settings, characters, and conflicts. Those seven types of story are:
    Overcoming the Monster
    Rags to Riches
    The Quest
    Voyage and Return
    Rebirth
    Comedy
    Tragedy
    This list comes from Booker’s seminal book, The Seven Basic Plots: Why We Tell Stories. It took him 34 years of research and reading to complete the 700-page psychoanalytic tome. But where did the idea of a limited number of stories come from? Is it true? If so, how does that affect writers - all of whom strive to create their own unique narrative experiences and conflict? Let’s dig a little deeper into this idea.
    Crunching story types and plot down to three
    Although The Seven Basic Plots is the most frequently cited text today, Booker was not the first person to propose that there are a limited number of story types. A list made by Foster-Harris in 1959 claimed there are only three types of stories:
    Happy ending
    Unhappy ending
    Tragedy
    While you can place just about every story you can think of into one of these three plot types, it’s overly simplistic, offering little in the way of observation of actual story structure. A simple display of the potential outcomes for the hero of a story, the Foster-Harris list sadly ignores much of the structural nuance in story beats that Booker’s list accommodates.
    The Hedonometer: An emotional approach to narrative and story type
    More recently (and perhaps intriguingly) the University of Vermont took a leaf from one of author Kurt Vonnegut’s theories and used powerful computer programs to analyze data from 1,737 fiction stories. The purpose was to track the emotional content of the plot by looking for words such as ‘tears,’ ‘laughed,’ ‘enemy,’ ‘poison’ and so on.
    Throughout any story, they describe building happy emotions as rise, and sadder emotions as fall. Their results concluded that there were six basic story types:
    “Rags to riches” (rise).
    “Tragedy,” or “Riches to rags” (fall).
    “Man in a hole” (fall-rise).
    “Icarus” (rise-fall).
    “Cinderella” (rise-fall-rise).
    “Oedipus” (fall-rise-fall).
    The entire research paper is available to read online, but it’s heavy going. Rather wonderful, however, are the emotion graphs produced to track the patterns of happiness during the narrative arc. Here, for example, we see the analyzed emotional arc of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone by J.K. Rowling:
    Dubbed the Hedonometer, the results of this analysis for a wide variety of novels is also free to view online, and makes for a fascinating resource for writers who like to analyze books in detail.
    Of course, not every story in the world has been analyzed, but most of the classics and popular books are there for you to peruse. (It’s also worth bearing in mind that this most recent analysis only looked at fiction available on Guttenberg - mostly older classics and all in English. Deeper exploration of other cultures and recent ideas might uncover a wholly new story type.)
    So… have all our stories already been told?
    Ultimately, what does all this science mean? If every story has already been written, is striving for originality a pointless task? The answer is no; it absolutely is not. While it may indeed be compelling - and likely true - that storytelling conventions are built on only six or seven broader foundations, the purpose of categorizing stories into broad types is as a way to understand fiction, not to limit our creativity or the ideas, values, and concepts we can explore...
    Read more at:
    www.autocrit.com/blog/7-stori...
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    TIMESTAMPS
    0:00 Intro
    0:26 Overcoming the Monster
    1:52 Rags to Riches
    3:19 The Quest
    4:40 The Voyage and Return
    5:45 Comedy
    6:47 Tragedy
    8:27 Rebirth

Комментарии • 13

  • @nikkimoon1533
    @nikkimoon1533 2 года назад +1

    This video was awesome! Subbed. 👌And hello from South Africa 👋🌍

    • @AutoCritEditing
      @AutoCritEditing  2 года назад

      Thanks so much! So great to know we have viewers from all over the world!

  • @timobrien4122
    @timobrien4122 2 года назад +7

    Some of these are story tropes (as well as basic plots) and some stories use many tropes together. Eg. A story can incorporate a character who goes through rags to riches, while the protagonist goes through a Quest, Voyage and Return, or Rebirth. A Monster can be battled with as well. Other wise a story type can be formulaic, predictable, cliche, and boring.

    • @AutoCritEditing
      @AutoCritEditing  2 года назад +2

      It can be a lot of fun mixing up story elements!

  • @abvll5049
    @abvll5049 Месяц назад

    There are only 2 types of stories.Narrations which keep u engaged and the boring ones .Your's is definitely engaging 😄

  • @anthonychadwick7373
    @anthonychadwick7373 2 года назад +2

    Awesome video. I can't think of any other types of stories to live outside of some combination of these 7!

  • @justinsmorningcoffee
    @justinsmorningcoffee 4 месяца назад

    My favorite is definitely the rebirth plot type

  • @drigodamus
    @drigodamus 2 года назад

    Love the video, thanks for sharing. Subbed!

  • @eringrech1646
    @eringrech1646 2 года назад

    Cool video!

  • @aurelalee7246
    @aurelalee7246 2 года назад +1

    NICE!!!

  • @idakoric516
    @idakoric516 Год назад +2

    I'm thinking of a larger novel, like The Covenant, which is really the story of the nation of South Africa. Or Under the Banner of Heaven, which is both a true story about a pair of murderous brothers (tragedy I guess) and the birth and evolution of Mormonism (a very very long quest?). Honestly, you can probably whittle the list down to much fewer options as you can metaphorically squeeze so many into "overcoming the monster" and "quest".

  • @silvergoon9009
    @silvergoon9009 2 года назад

    they all sound very similar, i dont get it tbh

    • @AutoCritEditing
      @AutoCritEditing  2 года назад +2

      I think you may be picking up on the fact that all stories at their root deal with a main character who experiences struggles and then has a major change as a result. So there is definitely a similarity to all stories.