| name | novelist-analyst |
| description | Analyzes events through narrative lens using story structure, character arc analysis, dramatic tension, thematic development, and narrative theory (three-act structure, hero's journey, conflict-resolution). Provides insights on narrative coherence, character motivations, dramatic stakes, plot development, and thematic resonance. Use when: Complex human stories, leadership analysis, organizational narratives, crisis narratives, cultural moments. Evaluates: Character development, narrative arc, dramatic tension, thematic depth, symbolic meaning, narrative coherence. |
Novelist Analyst Skill
Purpose
Analyze events through the disciplinary lens of narrative fiction, applying established storytelling frameworks (three-act structure, hero's journey, character arc theory), narrative theory, and literary analytical methods to understand human motivations, dramatic stakes, thematic resonance, and story coherence in real-world events.
When to Use This Skill
- Leadership Analysis: Understanding leaders as characters with motivations, flaws, and arcs
- Organizational Narratives: Analyzing company stories, culture shifts, transformations
- Crisis Narratives: Understanding how crises unfold as dramatic stories
- Cultural Moments: Analyzing cultural events through narrative lenses
- Conflict Analysis: Understanding human dimensions of conflicts
- Change Stories: Transformation narratives in organizations or societies
- Communication Analysis: Evaluating how stories are told and what they reveal
Core Philosophy: Narrative Thinking
Narrative analysis rests on fundamental principles:
Stories Reveal Truth: Beneath surface events lie deeper narratives that reveal motivations, conflicts, and meaning.
Characters Drive Action: Real people, like fictional characters, act from desire, fear, values, and contradictions. Understanding character illuminates events.
Structure Creates Meaning: How a story is structured—its beginning, middle, end, turning points—shapes our understanding of what happened.
Conflict Drives Story: All narratives emerge from conflict—internal or external, between characters, between character and world. Identifying core conflicts reveals what's truly at stake.
Theme Unifies Elements: Underlying themes—power, redemption, ambition, sacrifice—give coherence to disparate events.
Perspective Shapes Story: Who tells the story, from what viewpoint, determines what we see and understand.
Arc Implies Transformation: Characters and situations undergo arcs—change over time that follows patterns (rise, fall, redemption, corruption).
Theoretical Foundations (Expandable)
Framework 1: Three-Act Structure (Classical Dramatic Structure)
Origin: Aristotelian poetics, refined through centuries of dramatic tradition
Core Principles:
- Stories naturally organize into beginning, middle, and end
- Each act serves distinct narrative function
- Turning points propel story forward
- Rising action builds toward climax
- Resolution provides closure
Three Acts:
Act I: Setup (25%)
- Establish status quo and normal world
- Introduce protagonist and core desires
- Present inciting incident that disrupts equilibrium
- Protagonist commits to journey/goal
- First Act Turn: Point of no return
Act II: Confrontation (50%)
- Protagonist pursues goal, faces obstacles
- Complications escalate, stakes rise
- Midpoint: Major reversal or revelation
- Dark night of the soul: Lowest point
- Second Act Turn: Final push toward resolution
Act III: Resolution (25%)
- Climax: Confrontation with central conflict
- Protagonist transformed or defeated
- New equilibrium established
- Themes crystallized
Key Insights:
- Provides roadmap for narrative development
- Identifies where story is in its arc
- Reveals whether narrative is complete or truncated
- Shows how tension builds and releases
When to Apply:
- Leadership journeys (rise and fall narratives)
- Organizational transformations
- Crisis management stories
- Policy initiatives with clear beginnings/ends
Sources:
- Three-Act Structure - Wikipedia
- Syd Field, Screenplay: The Foundations of Screenwriting
Framework 2: Hero's Journey (Monomyth)
Origin: Joseph Campbell's The Hero with a Thousand Faces (1949)
Core Principle: Stories across cultures follow common pattern of departure, initiation, return
Twelve Stages:
Act I: Departure
- Ordinary World: Hero's normal life
- Call to Adventure: Challenge or quest appears
- Refusal of the Call: Hero hesitates
- Meeting the Mentor: Guidance received
- Crossing the Threshold: Hero commits
Act II: Initiation 6. Tests, Allies, Enemies: Hero faces challenges 7. Approach to Inmost Cave: Preparation for ordeal 8. Ordeal: Supreme challenge, confronting death/fear 9. Reward: Hero seizes treasure or knowledge
Act III: Return 10. The Road Back: Journey home begins 11. Resurrection: Final test, transformation complete 12. Return with Elixir: Hero brings wisdom/gift to community
Key Insights:
- Universal pattern reflects human psychology
- Transformation through trial is core human story
- Mentors, allies, and tests serve archetypal functions
- True heroism involves bringing wisdom back to community
When to Apply:
- Entrepreneurial journeys
- Leadership transformations
- Social movements
- Personal and organizational reinventions
Sources:
- Joseph Campbell, The Hero with a Thousand Faces (1949)
- Christopher Vogler, The Writer's Journey (1992)
Framework 3: Character Arc Theory
Definition: The transformation a character undergoes through story events
Three Arc Types:
Positive/Change Arc:
- Character overcomes flaws, grows, achieves goal
- Truth replaces lie they believe
- Internal and external goals align
- Example: Scrooge's redemption
Negative/Fall Arc:
- Character succumbs to flaws, degrades, fails
- Lie they believe deepens
- Corruption or destruction
- Example: Macbeth's ambition leads to downfall
Flat Arc:
- Character already embodies truth
- Remains steadfast in values
- Transforms world around them instead
- Example: Atticus Finch's moral constancy
Key Insights:
- Character change (or refusal to change) is story's heart
- Internal journey mirrors external events
- Flaws and desires drive choices
- Transformation must be earned through trials
When to Apply:
- Leadership analysis (growth or corruption)
- Organizational culture shifts
- Personal transformation stories
- Evaluating whether change is authentic or superficial
Source: K.M. Weiland, Creating Character Arcs (2016)
Framework 4: Dramatic Conflict Types
Core Principle: All stories emerge from conflict—opposition between forces
Seven Classic Conflicts:
Character vs. Character
- Protagonist opposes antagonist
- Personal rivalry, competition
- Example: Political opponents
Character vs. Self
- Internal struggle
- Competing desires, moral dilemmas
- Example: Leader torn between values and expediency
Character vs. Society
- Individual against social norms, institutions
- Reform, rebellion, resistance
- Example: Whistleblower vs. corrupt organization
Character vs. Nature
- Struggle against natural forces
- Survival, disaster response
- Example: Crisis management in natural disaster
Character vs. Technology
- Human confronting technological systems
- Automation anxieties, AI concerns
- Example: Workers displaced by automation
Character vs. Fate/Supernatural
- Struggle against destiny or unknown forces
- Existential questions
- Example: Pandemic as inexorable force
Character vs. Unknown
- Mystery, uncertainty
- Search for truth or meaning
- Example: Investigation, discovery narratives
Key Insights:
- Identifying primary conflict clarifies what's at stake
- Multiple conflicts can operate simultaneously
- External conflicts often reflect internal ones
- Resolution requires addressing core conflict
When to Apply: Analyzing any situation to understand fundamental tensions driving events
Framework 5: Narrative Voice and Perspective
Point of View Options:
First Person: "I" narrator, subjective, limited knowledge
- Intimate, unreliable narrator possible
- Example: Memoir, insider account
Second Person: "You" narrator, immersive, rare
- Directly implicates reader
- Example: Choose-your-own-adventure effect
Third Person Limited: "He/she," one character's perspective
- Balanced intimacy and objectivity
- Most common in fiction
Third Person Omniscient: "He/she," all-knowing narrator
- Access to all minds, broader view
- Godlike perspective
Key Insights:
- Who tells the story determines what we know
- Perspective reveals bias and limits
- Unreliable narrators shape (mis)understanding
- Omniscient view provides context but loses intimacy
When to Apply:
- Media analysis (whose story is told?)
- Organizational narratives (management vs. worker perspective)
- Historical events (victor's story vs. loser's)
Core Analytical Frameworks (Expandable)
Framework 1: Story Spine (Narrative Skeleton)
Structure (Kenn Adams):
- Once upon a time...
- And every day...
- Until one day...
- Because of that...
- Because of that...
- Until finally...
- And ever since then...
Purpose: Reduces any story to essential narrative beats
Analysis Questions:
- What was the status quo?
- What disrupted it?
- What chain of consequences followed?
- What was the resolution?
- What is the new normal?
Application: Quickly identify narrative structure of events
Framework 2: Freytag's Pyramid (Dramatic Arc)
Five-Part Structure:
- Exposition: Setup, characters, context
- Rising Action: Complications, escalating tension
- Climax: Turning point, highest tension
- Falling Action: Consequences unfold
- Denouement: Resolution, new equilibrium
Visual: Pyramid shape—gradual rise to peak, then descent
Value: Maps dramatic tension over time, identifies climactic moments
Application: Crisis narratives, organizational changes, political campaigns
Framework 3: Character Desire and Obstacle
Formula: Character wants X, but Y prevents it
Elements:
- Desire/Goal: What character wants (external)
- Need: What character actually needs (internal)
- Obstacle: What prevents achievement
- Stakes: What happens if character fails
- Motivation: Why character wants this
- Flaw: Character weakness that complicates journey
Analysis Process:
- Identify protagonist's stated goal
- Identify deeper psychological need
- Map obstacles (external and internal)
- Assess stakes (consequences of failure)
- Understand motivation (why this matters)
- Recognize flaw (what undermines success)
Application: Leadership analysis, negotiation dynamics, strategic decision-making
Framework 4: Theme and Motif
Theme: Central idea or universal truth explored by story
Common Themes:
- Power and corruption
- Redemption and forgiveness
- Ambition and consequence
- Sacrifice and duty
- Identity and belonging
- Freedom vs. security
- Tradition vs. progress
Motif: Recurring element (image, phrase, symbol) that reinforces theme
Analysis:
- What deeper meaning do events convey?
- What patterns recur across narrative?
- What symbols carry thematic weight?
- What questions does the story ask?
Application: Cultural analysis, political messaging, brand narratives
Framework 5: Narrative Coherence and Plausibility
Coherence Criteria:
- Internal Consistency: Do events logically follow from previous events?
- Character Consistency: Do characters act according to established traits and motivations?
- Causal Logic: Are cause-effect relationships clear and believable?
- Thematic Unity: Do elements serve coherent themes?
Plausibility:
- Does this ring true psychologically?
- Are motivations believable?
- Are coincidences excessive?
- Does resolution feel earned?
Red Flags:
- Deus ex machina (contrived solutions)
- Plot holes (inconsistencies)
- Character acting out of character
- Unmotivated behavior
Application: Evaluating official narratives, media stories, organizational change stories
Methodological Approaches (Expandable)
Method 1: Close Reading and Textual Analysis
Definition: Careful, detailed analysis of text to understand how meaning is created
Process:
- Read/observe events multiple times
- Note language, imagery, symbolism
- Identify patterns and repetitions
- Analyze structure and form
- Consider context and subtext
- Interpret deeper meanings
Application: Analyzing speeches, statements, media coverage, organizational communications
Method 2: Character Study
Dimensions of Character:
- Backstory: History shaping character
- Motivation: Conscious and unconscious drives
- Values: Core beliefs and principles
- Flaws: Weaknesses and blind spots
- Desires: External goals
- Needs: Internal psychological requirements
- Contradictions: Internal conflicts
- Arc: Transformation or stasis
Process:
- Gather biographical information
- Identify stated goals and hidden needs
- Analyze past actions for patterns
- Note contradictions and complexities
- Track changes over time
- Assess relationship to others
Application: Leadership analysis, negotiation, stakeholder understanding
Method 3: Plot Mapping
Elements to Map:
- Inciting incident
- Rising action beats
- Midpoint reversal
- Dark night/crisis
- Climax
- Resolution
- Character positions at each beat
Visualization: Timeline with tension levels, character positions, key events
Purpose: See overall narrative shape, identify missing elements, predict trajectory
Application: Crisis management, transformation projects, political campaigns
Method 4: Thematic Analysis
Process:
- Identify recurring ideas, questions, concerns
- Note symbolic elements and their meanings
- Recognize contrasts and oppositions (freedom/control, tradition/change)
- Synthesize into central themes
- Evaluate how well theme is developed
Value: Reveals deeper meaning beyond surface events
Application: Cultural analysis, brand positioning, political messaging
Method 5: Comparative Narrative Analysis
Approach: Compare multiple versions or parallel stories
Comparison Dimensions:
- How do different narrators tell same events?
- What elements are emphasized or omitted?
- Whose perspective is privileged?
- What narrative patterns recur across cases?
Application: Media analysis, historical events, organizational change
Analysis Rubric
What to Examine
Narrative Structure:
- Where is this story in its arc (setup, confrontation, resolution)?
- What was the inciting incident?
- What are major turning points?
- Is there a clear climax?
- How complete is the story?
Characters and Motivations:
- Who are the protagonists and antagonists?
- What do characters want (external goals)?
- What do characters need (internal)?
- What are character flaws and strengths?
- How do characters change?
Conflict and Stakes:
- What is the central conflict?
- What are the stakes (what happens if protagonist fails)?
- What obstacles stand in the way?
- Internal vs. external conflicts?
- How is tension building or releasing?
Theme and Meaning:
- What deeper ideas are being explored?
- What questions does this raise?
- What patterns recur?
- What symbols carry meaning?
- What is this story really about?
Coherence and Plausibility:
- Does the narrative hold together?
- Are motivations believable?
- Are events causally connected?
- Are there plot holes or inconsistencies?
- Does resolution feel earned?
Questions to Ask
Structural Questions:
- What is the story spine (setup → disruption → consequences → resolution)?
- Where are we in the three-act structure?
- What was the point of no return?
- What is the climax?
Character Questions:
- Who is the protagonist of this story?
- What does the protagonist want?
- What does the protagonist need (internally)?
- What is the protagonist's fatal flaw?
- How does the protagonist change (or fail to change)?
- Who are the supporting characters and what roles do they play?
Conflict Questions:
- What is the core conflict?
- What are the stakes?
- What obstacles prevent resolution?
- Is conflict internal, external, or both?
- How does conflict escalate?
Thematic Questions:
- What is this story really about?
- What deeper truths emerge?
- What universal human experiences does this touch?
- What does this say about power, identity, belonging, sacrifice, etc.?
Perspective Questions:
- Whose story is being told?
- Whose perspective is privileged?
- What would this look like from another viewpoint?
- Who is the narrator and are they reliable?
Plausibility Questions:
- Do character motivations make sense?
- Are coincidences excessive?
- Does the resolution feel earned?
- Are there deus ex machina elements?
Factors to Consider
Narrative Factors:
- Story structure and pacing
- Turning points and reversals
- Dramatic tension
- Causality and logic
Character Factors:
- Depth and complexity
- Consistency and evolution
- Motivation and desire
- Flaws and contradictions
Thematic Factors:
- Central ideas and questions
- Symbolic elements
- Recurring patterns
- Universal resonance
Context Factors:
- Cultural moment
- Genre conventions
- Audience expectations
- Historical parallels
Narrative Parallels to Consider
Classic Story Types:
- Hero's journey (transformation through trial)
- Tragedy (fatal flaw leads to downfall)
- Comedy (obstacles overcome, harmony restored)
- Quest (journey to achieve goal)
- Rags to riches (rise from humble beginnings)
- Riches to rags (fall from grace)
- Rebirth (redemption, second chance)
- Voyage and return (journey to strange world, return transformed)
Implications to Explore
Narrative Implications:
- What does story structure reveal about meaning?
- Is narrative complete or ongoing?
- What would satisfying resolution require?
- What narrative patterns does this exemplify?
Character Implications:
- What do character choices reveal about values?
- Is transformation authentic or superficial?
- What drives behavior?
- What would redemption require?
Thematic Implications:
- What universal truths emerge?
- What does this say about human nature?
- What cultural values are reinforced or challenged?
- What lessons does the narrative offer?
Strategic Implications:
- How should protagonists navigate their arc?
- What narrative framing serves goals?
- How can story be shaped going forward?
- What endings are possible?
Step-by-Step Analysis Process
Step 1: Identify the Story and Its Stage
Actions:
- Clearly state what narrative is being analyzed
- Determine where story is in its arc (beginning, middle, end)
- Identify genre or type of story
- Establish timeline and key events
Outputs:
- Story summary
- Current stage in narrative arc
- Genre identification
Step 2: Map the Plot Structure
Actions:
- Identify inciting incident (what disrupted status quo)
- Map rising action (escalating complications)
- Locate midpoint (major reversal or revelation)
- Identify crisis point (dark night of the soul)
- Determine if climax has occurred or is approaching
- Assess resolution (if any)
Tools:
- Three-act structure
- Freytag's pyramid
- Story spine
Outputs:
- Plot map with major beats
- Identification of turning points
- Assessment of narrative completeness
Step 3: Analyze Characters
Actions:
- Identify protagonist(s) and antagonist(s)
- Map character desires (external goals)
- Identify character needs (internal)
- Recognize character flaws
- Assess relationships and dynamics
- Track character arcs (change or stasis)
Character Dimensions:
- Backstory
- Motivation
- Values
- Contradictions
- Transformation
Outputs:
- Character profiles
- Motivation map
- Arc assessment
Step 4: Identify Core Conflicts
Actions:
- Determine primary conflict type(s)
- Identify what's at stake
- Map obstacles preventing resolution
- Distinguish external vs. internal conflicts
- Assess how conflict escalates or resolves
Conflict Types:
- Character vs. Character
- Character vs. Self
- Character vs. Society
- Character vs. Nature
- Character vs. Technology
- Character vs. Fate
Outputs:
- Conflict identification
- Stakes assessment
- Obstacle mapping
Step 5: Extract Themes and Meaning
Actions:
- Identify recurring ideas, questions, symbols
- Recognize thematic oppositions (freedom/control, etc.)
- Synthesize central themes
- Assess thematic development
- Consider what story is "really about"
Common Themes:
- Power and corruption
- Redemption
- Ambition
- Sacrifice
- Identity
- Belonging
Outputs:
- Thematic analysis
- Symbolic interpretation
- Deeper meaning synthesis
Step 6: Evaluate Narrative Coherence
Actions:
- Check internal consistency
- Assess character consistency
- Evaluate causal logic
- Identify plot holes or contradictions
- Determine if resolution feels earned
- Note any deus ex machina elements
Coherence Criteria:
- Logical causality
- Character consistency
- Plausible motivation
- Earned outcomes
Outputs:
- Coherence assessment
- Identification of weaknesses
- Plausibility evaluation
Step 7: Consider Perspective and Voice
Actions:
- Identify whose story is being told
- Recognize narrator's perspective
- Assess reliability of narrator
- Consider alternative perspectives
- Evaluate what is emphasized or omitted
Perspective Questions:
- Who controls the narrative?
- What viewpoints are privileged?
- What would antagonist's version be?
- How does perspective shape understanding?
Outputs:
- Perspective analysis
- Alternative viewpoints
- Bias identification
Step 8: Apply Comparative Narrative Analysis
Actions:
- Identify analogous narratives (historical, fictional)
- Compare story structures
- Recognize archetypal patterns
- Draw parallels and distinctions
- Learn from similar narratives
Comparison Types:
- Hero's journey parallels
- Tragedy patterns
- Redemption arcs
- Rise and fall narratives
Outputs:
- Narrative parallels
- Pattern recognition
- Comparative insights
Step 9: Assess Narrative Trajectory
Actions:
- Determine if story is complete or ongoing
- Project possible endings
- Identify what resolution would require
- Consider alternative trajectories
- Assess likelihood of different outcomes
Trajectory Questions:
- Where is this story headed?
- What endings are possible?
- What would satisfying resolution require?
- What choice points remain?
Outputs:
- Trajectory assessment
- Possible endings
- Resolution requirements
Step 10: Synthesize Narrative Insights
Actions:
- Integrate all analytical dimensions
- Provide clear interpretation
- Identify key insights about motivations, stakes, trajectory
- Acknowledge alternative interpretations
- Draw lessons or implications
Synthesis Questions:
- What does narrative analysis reveal?
- What are characters really after?
- What's truly at stake?
- What does this story mean?
- What can we learn?
Outputs:
- Comprehensive narrative interpretation
- Key insights
- Strategic implications
Usage Examples
Example 1: CEO Leadership Journey - Rise, Crisis, Redemption?
Event: Tech company CEO faces public scandal (ethical violation), board pressure, and potential ouster. CEO must decide whether to step down or fight to stay.
Analysis:
Step 1 - Story Identification:
- Story: CEO's leadership arc, crisis point
- Stage: Late Act II (crisis/dark night) or early Act III (climax approaching)
- Genre: Leadership rise-and-fall or redemption narrative
Step 2 - Plot Structure:
- Inciting Incident: Public revelation of ethical violation
- Rising Action: Media scrutiny, internal investigations, board meetings
- Midpoint (earlier): Peak of CEO's power and success
- Crisis/Dark Night: Current moment—reputation in ruins, allies deserting, future uncertain
- Climax (approaching): Board vote, resignation decision, or public statement
- Resolution (unknown): Departure, redemption, or new chapter
Step 3 - Character Analysis:
- Protagonist: CEO
- Desire (external): Retain position, restore reputation
- Need (internal): Reckon with ethical choices, find authentic identity beyond role
- Flaw: Hubris, ethical blind spot, isolation at top
- Arc Type: TBD—Positive (redeemed through acknowledgment and change) or Negative (fall due to inability to change)
- Supporting Cast: Board (gatekeepers), loyal lieutenants, critics, family
Step 4 - Core Conflicts:
- Primary: Character vs. Self (internal reckoning with choices and values)
- Secondary: Character vs. Society (public judgment, media)
- Tertiary: Character vs. Character (board members, activist shareholders)
- Stakes: Career, legacy, identity, company future
- Obstacles: Past actions, public opinion, board skepticism, own ego
Step 5 - Themes:
- Power and corruption (how power led to ethical compromise)
- Redemption (can CEO acknowledge wrongdoing and change?)
- Identity (who is CEO without the title and power?)
- Authenticity (performing role vs. being genuine)
- Accountability (facing consequences)
Step 6 - Coherence:
- Motivation: Believable—CEO wants to preserve achievement and identity
- Causality: Clear—past choices → exposure → crisis
- Character consistency: Does CEO have capacity for change? Prior behavior suggests not, but crisis can catalyze transformation
- Plausibility: High—familiar pattern
Step 7 - Perspective:
- CEO's perspective: Sees self as visionary unfairly attacked
- Board's perspective: Sees CEO as liability, violation of trust
- Public's perspective: Betrayal by powerful figure
- Employees' perspective: Confusion, disappointment, concern for company
- Note: Whose story gets told shapes outcome
Step 8 - Narrative Parallels:
- Classical tragedy (Macbeth, hubris leads to downfall)
- Redemption arc (Scrooge, transformation through crisis)
- Hero's journey (ordeal stage—will CEO emerge transformed?)
- Real-world parallels: Other CEO scandals (outcomes vary)
Step 9 - Trajectory Assessment:
- Possible Endings:
- Tragedy: CEO refuses accountability, fights, loses everything
- Redemption: CEO acknowledges failure, steps down with dignity, works to make amends, returns later transformed
- Pyrrhic Victory: CEO survives but reputation permanently damaged
- Escape/Avoidance: CEO resigns, moves on without real reckoning
- Resolution Requirements:
- For redemption: Genuine acknowledgment, accountability, changed behavior, time
- For tragedy: Continued denial, blame others, isolation
Step 10 - Synthesis:
- This is a classic leadership crisis narrative at Act II's dark night
- CEO faces choice: Transform (positive arc) or fall (negative arc)
- Core conflict is internal—can CEO see past ego and role to confront ethical failure?
- Themes of power, accountability, identity resonate universally
- Outcome depends on CEO's capacity for self-awareness and change
- Stakeholders hold power to shape ending (board decision, public judgment)
- Authentic redemption requires more than PR—demands real transformation
- Story is archetypal, echoing countless rise-and-fall narratives
Example 2: Company Transformation - Narrative Coherence and Character
Event: Legacy manufacturing company attempts "digital transformation" over three years. Initiative launched with fanfare, hits obstacles, leadership divided, outcomes uncertain.
Analysis:
Step 1 - Story Identification:
- Story: Organizational transformation journey
- Stage: Mid-Act II (complications escalating)
- Genre: Quest narrative or cautionary tale
Step 2 - Plot Structure:
- Status Quo: Traditional company, analog processes, established culture
- Inciting Incident: Market pressures, new CEO declares "digital transformation"
- Rising Action: New hires, investments, pilot projects, cultural resistance
- Midpoint: Six months in, early pilots mixed, excitement waning
- Current: Year two, divided leadership, employees confused, results unclear
- Crisis (approaching): Leadership must decide—double down, pivot, or retreat
Step 3 - Character Analysis:
- Protagonist: CEO or entire organization
- Desire: Transform into modern, competitive company
- Need: Understand what transformation truly requires, reconcile old and new
- Flaw: Impatience, superficial understanding of culture change, underestimating obstacles
- Supporting Cast:
- Digital evangelists (allies pushing change)
- Old guard (resisters, protecting traditional ways)
- Confused middle (majority, uncertain what's expected)
- Consultants (mentors/tricksters, helpful or just selling)
Step 4 - Core Conflicts:
- Primary: Organization vs. Self (identity crisis—who are we becoming?)
- Secondary: Tradition vs. Progress (old guard vs. new guard)
- Tertiary: Organization vs. Market (competitive pressure)
- Stakes: Survival, identity, jobs, culture
- Obstacles: Entrenched culture, skills gaps, cost, resistance, unclear vision
Step 5 - Themes:
- Change and continuity (what to preserve, what to abandon?)
- Identity (who are we if we're no longer what we were?)
- Progress and loss (gains from change, but also what's lost)
- Authenticity (real transformation vs. superficial rebranding)
Step 6 - Coherence:
- Weaknesses:
- Unclear protagonist (whose journey is this?)
- Vague goal ("digital transformation" means what exactly?)
- Unmotivated behavior (why should employees change if unclear why?)
- Possible deus ex machina (expecting technology alone to solve problems)
- Strengths:
- Realistic obstacles (culture change is hard)
- Believable resistance (people fear change)
- Stakes are clear (adapt or die)
Step 7 - Perspective:
- CEO's story: Heroic transformation, resistance is obstacle to overcome
- Old guard's story: Wisdom being discarded, valuable traditions threatened
- Employees' story: Confusion, mixed messages, fear
- Customers' story: Hoping for better service, skeptical of changes
- Note: Coherent narrative requires integrating perspectives, not privileging one
Step 8 - Narrative Parallels:
- Hero's journey (ordeal stage—transformation through trial)
- Quest narrative (seeking prize, facing obstacles)
- Cautionary tales (Icarus flying too high, moving too fast)
- Successful transformations (other companies that navigated change)
Step 9 - Trajectory Assessment:
- Possible Endings:
- Success: True transformation, culture shifts, outcomes delivered
- Failure: Initiative fizzles, return to old ways, demoralization
- Partial Success: Some changes stick, others don't, muddled outcome
- Pivot: Recognize original vision flawed, adjust to more realistic path
- Resolution Requirements:
- Clear, compelling vision (why we're changing)
- Leadership alignment (no more divided message)
- Small wins that build momentum
- Respect for what's being lost (honor the past)
- Time (transformation takes years, not months)
Step 10 - Synthesis:
- This transformation narrative suffers from coherence problems
- Unclear protagonist and vague goal undermine story
- Core conflict is identity crisis—organization doesn't know what it's becoming
- Multiple perspectives reveal divided organization, no shared story
- For successful resolution, organization needs:
- Unified leadership narrative
- Clear vision that honors past while building future
- Realistic timeline
- Small wins to build belief
- Current trajectory leans toward partial success or failure unless narrative is clarified
- Thematic resonance: Authentic change requires wrestling with identity, not just adopting new tools
Example 3: Political Campaign - Hero's Journey Applied
Event: Underdog candidate runs for major office, faces long odds, builds movement, reaches key election.
Analysis:
Step 1 - Story Identification:
- Story: Candidate's campaign journey
- Stage: Full arc from announcement to election
- Genre: Hero's journey, underdog narrative
Step 2 - Plot Structure (Hero's Journey):
- Ordinary World: Candidate's life before campaign, relative obscurity
- Call to Adventure: Decision to run, driven by issue or moment
- Refusal: Initial hesitation, doubts, long odds
- Meeting Mentor: Campaign manager, key advisor, or personal figure
- Crossing Threshold: Campaign announcement, point of no return
- Tests, Allies, Enemies: Primary battles, building coalition, facing opponents
- Approach Inmost Cave: Final stretch, highest stakes
- Ordeal: Election day, supreme test
- Reward: Victory (or noble defeat)
- Return with Elixir: Bringing change or lesson to community
Step 3 - Character Analysis:
- Protagonist: Candidate
- Desire: Win election, enact agenda
- Need: Serve community, prove self, or fulfill deeper calling
- Flaw: Inexperience, naivete, or specific personal weakness
- Arc: Growth from uncertain outsider to confident leader (or disillusionment)
- Supporting Cast:
- Mentor (advisor)
- Allies (campaign team, volunteers)
- Threshold guardians (party gatekeepers)
- Shapeshifters (fair-weather supporters)
- Shadow (opponent, external threat)
- Trickster (media, unpredictable events)
Step 4 - Core Conflicts:
- Primary: Candidate vs. Opponent (political competition)
- Secondary: Candidate vs. Self (internal doubts, learning to lead)
- Tertiary: Candidate vs. System (establishment resistance)
- Stakes: Policy outcomes, representation, personal vindication
- Obstacles: Resources, name recognition, opposition attacks, gaffes, scandals
Step 5 - Themes:
- Democracy and representation (giving voice to voiceless)
- Underdog resilience (overcoming odds)
- Transformation (personal growth through trial)
- Community and belonging (building movement)
- Power and service (using power for good)
Step 6 - Coherence:
- Classic narrative arc, highly coherent
- Character motivation clear and believable
- Obstacles realistic and escalating
- Transformation earned through trials
- Potential weakness: Too neat, real politics messier
Step 7 - Perspective:
- Candidate's story: Hero fighting for change
- Opponent's story: Experienced leader defending record against demagogue
- Voters' story: Choosing between visions for future
- Media's story: Horse race, drama, conflict
- Note: Framing matters enormously—is candidate hero or threat?
Step 8 - Narrative Parallels:
- Classic hero's journey (Luke Skywalker, Frodo)
- Underdog sports narratives (Rocky)
- Historical political outsiders (various)
- David vs. Goliath (archetypal)
Step 9 - Trajectory Assessment:
- Possible Endings:
- Victory: Hero succeeds, elixir delivered, community transformed
- Noble Defeat: Hero loses but movement built, lessons learned, return later
- Corruption: Hero compromised by process, loses self
- Pyrrhic Victory: Wins but at great cost, ideals compromised
- Resolution Requirements:
- Climactic election day ordeal
- Clear outcome (win or loss)
- Reflection on journey and meaning
- Sense of transformation or lesson
Step 10 - Synthesis:
- Campaign is near-perfect hero's journey structure
- Candidate transforms from ordinary world to tested leader
- Core conflict external (opponent) mirrors internal (self-doubt)
- Themes of democracy, representation, transformation resonate
- Narrative coherence high—clear arc, motivated character, escalating stakes
- Outcome determines story type: Victory = heroic success, Defeat = noble tragedy or lesson learned
- Universal appeal: We identify with underdog challenging powerful
- Strategic insight: Campaigns should embrace hero's journey structure in messaging
- Caution: Real politics more complex than clean narrative, avoid oversimplification
Reference Materials (Expandable)
Key Theorists and Works
Aristotle (384-322 BCE)
- Field: Poetics, dramatic theory
- Key Work: Poetics (~335 BCE)
- Contribution: Three-act structure, plot as soul of drama, catharsis
Joseph Campbell (1904-1987)
- Field: Comparative mythology, narrative theory
- Key Work: The Hero with a Thousand Faces (1949)
- Contribution: Monomyth (hero's journey), universal story patterns
Christopher Vogler
- Field: Screenwriting, narrative structure
- Key Work: The Writer's Journey (1992)
- Contribution: Adapted Campbell's hero's journey for modern storytelling
Robert McKee
- Field: Screenwriting, story structure
- Key Work: Story: Substance, Structure, Style (1997)
- Contribution: Principles of story design, character arc
Kurt Vonnegut
- Field: Fiction, narrative theory
- Contribution: Story shapes on graph (man in hole, boy meets girl, etc.)
Vladimir Propp (1895-1970)
- Field: Narratology, folklore studies
- Key Work: Morphology of the Folktale (1928)
- Contribution: Identified 31 narrative functions and 7 character archetypes in Russian fairy tales, revealing underlying story patterns
- Impact: "Reshaped the study of narrative almost completely"
- Sources: Vladimir Propp - Fiveable, Propp's Functions - ResearchGate
Narratology and Literary Theory
Narratology Resources
- Structuralist Narratology - Literary Theory and Criticism - Overview of narratological approaches
- Narratology - Wikipedia - Comprehensive introduction
- Narratology (literary theory) - EBSCO - Academic resource
- Narratology - Cambridge History of Literary Criticism - Scholarly overview
- Narrative Theory - Literariness.org - Theory foundations
Story Structure Resources
- Story Structure: 7 Types - Reedsy - Contemporary guide
- Narrative Structure - Bookish Bay - Key components explained
- How to Structure a Story - MasterClass (2025) - Modern teaching resource
- Beyond the Hero's Journey - Medium - Alternative narrative models
Professional Organizations
Writers Guild of America
- Website: https://www.wga.org/
- Resources: Industry standards, craft resources
International Association of Literary Journalism
- Focus: Narrative nonfiction, literary journalism
Essential Resources
- Syd Field, Screenplay: The Foundations of Screenwriting
- K.M. Weiland, Creating Character Arcs
- John Truby, The Anatomy of Story
- Blake Snyder, Save the Cat!
- E.M. Forster, Aspects of the Novel
Verification Checklist
After completing narrative analysis:
- Identified story stage and structure
- Mapped plot with major beats (inciting incident, climax, resolution)
- Analyzed protagonist's desires, needs, flaws, and arc
- Identified core conflicts and stakes
- Extracted central themes
- Evaluated narrative coherence and plausibility
- Considered perspective and whose story is told
- Applied comparative narrative analysis
- Assessed trajectory and possible endings
- Synthesized insights about meaning and implications
Common Pitfalls to Avoid
Pitfall 1: Forcing Structure
- Problem: Imposing three-act structure where it doesn't fit
- Solution: Use frameworks flexibly, recognize when narratives deviate
Pitfall 2: Overlooking Complexity
- Problem: Reducing real people to simple character types
- Solution: Recognize human complexity, multiple motivations, contradictions
Pitfall 3: Ignoring Context
- Problem: Analyzing narrative in isolation from social/political context
- Solution: Situate stories in their contexts, understand constraints
Pitfall 4: Privileging Protagonist
- Problem: Only seeing story from protagonist's viewpoint
- Solution: Consider antagonist's perspective, multiple viewpoints
Pitfall 5: Confusing Narrative with Reality
- Problem: Treating narrative framing as objective truth
- Solution: Recognize narrative is interpretation, seek underlying facts
Pitfall 6: Demanding Neat Endings
- Problem: Expecting real-world stories to have clean resolutions
- Solution: Accept ambiguity, ongoing stories, messy reality
Pitfall 7: Overlooking Smaller Stories
- Problem: Focusing only on central narrative, missing subplots
- Solution: Attend to supporting characters, parallel stories
Pitfall 8: Presentism
- Problem: Judging past characters by contemporary values
- Solution: Understand historical context, values of the time
Success Criteria
A quality narrative analysis:
- Identifies clear story structure and stage
- Provides deep character analysis (motivations, flaws, arcs)
- Identifies core conflicts and stakes
- Extracts meaningful themes
- Evaluates narrative coherence
- Considers multiple perspectives
- Applies relevant narrative frameworks appropriately
- Draws insights about meaning and trajectory
- Acknowledges complexity and ambiguity
- Provides actionable understanding
Integration with Other Analysts
Narrative analysis complements other perspectives:
- Economist: Adds human motivations and story to economic incentives
- Political Scientist: Provides character and narrative depth to political actors
- Historian: Narrative coherence and meaning-making in historical events
- Psychologist: Inner character life, motivations, transformation
- Sociologist: Individual stories within social structures
Narrative analysis is particularly strong on:
- Character motivation and development
- Story structure and meaning
- Thematic interpretation
- Emotional and psychological dimensions
- Communication and framing
Continuous Improvement
This skill evolves through:
- Studying diverse narratives and story forms
- Analyzing real-world events through narrative lens
- Refining character and plot analysis techniques
- Engaging with narrative theory developments
- Cross-disciplinary integration
Skill Status: Pass 1 Complete - Comprehensive Foundation Established Quality Level: High - Comprehensive narrative analysis capability Token Count: ~8,500 tokens (target range achieved)