Narrative criticism


Narrative criticism focuses on the stories a speaker or a writer tells to understand how they help us make meaning out of our daily human experiences. Narrative theory is a means by which we can comprehend how we impose order on our experiences and actions by giving them a narrative form. According to Walter Fisher, narratives are fundamental to communication and provide structure for human experience and influence people to share common explanations and understandings. Fisher defines narratives as “symbolic actions-words and/or deeds that have sequence and meaning for those who live, create, or interpret them.” Study of narrative criticism, therefore, includes form, genre, structure characterization, and communicator’s perspective.

Characteristics of narrative criticism

Characteristics of a narrative were defined as early as Aristotle in his Poetics under plot. He called plot as the “first principle” or the “soul of a tragedy.” According to him, plot is the arrangement of incidents that imitate the action with a beginning, middle, and end. Plot includes introduction of characters, rising action and introduction of complication, development of complication, climax, and final resolution. As described by White and Martin , plot involves a structure of action. However, not all narratives contain a plot. Fragmentation occurs as the traditional plot disappears, narratives become less linear, and the burden of meaning making gets shifted from the narrator to the reader.
Narratives can be found in a range of practices such as novels, short stories, plays, films, histories, documentaries, gossip, biographies, television and scholarly books. All of these artifacts make excellent objects for narrative criticism. When performing a narrative criticism, critics should focus on the features of the narrative that allow them to say something meaningful about the artifact. Sample questions from Sonja K Foss offer a guide for analysis:
David Rhoads introduced the term "narrative criticism" in 1982 to describe a new literary approach to the New Testament gospels. It analyzes narratives as complete tapestries, organic wholes, and attends to the constitutive features of narratives such as characters, setting, plot, literary devices, point of view, narrator, implied author, and implied reader.
The first book-length treatment of a gospel from a narrative-critical perspective is Mark as Story. Rhoads and Michie analyzed the Gospel of Mark in terms of the role of the narrator, literary devices, settings, plot, characters and characterization, and audience. On the heels of Rhoads and Michie, R. Alan Culpepper published the first book-length treatment of the Gospel of John from a narrative-critical perspective. Culpepper developed the role of the narrator and point of view in the narrative, the role of narrative time, plot, characters, literary devices such as misunderstanding and symbolism, and the role of the implied reader. Following these two seminal studies on Mark and John in the 1980s, several hundred narrative-critical and narratological studies have been published on the gospels, Acts, and the Book of Revelation.
New Testament narrative criticism had its roots in Russian formalism, French structuralism, and New Criticism, but today has moved beyond its formalist beginnings and has applied other approaches. Examples include the role of politics in the first century world, the influence of the social world of the first century on the New Testament, feminist approaches to narrative criticism, reader-response criticism and narrative criticism, and cognitive narratology and New Testament narrative criticism.