Narrative
A narrative constitutes a fundamental human mode of expression and cognition, wherein sequences of events—real or imagined—are structured to impose order, causality, and meaning on experiences such as time, agency, and change.[1][2] Narratives manifest across diverse forms, including oral traditions, written literature, visual media, and personal recountings, transcending cultural and linguistic boundaries as a universal tool for sense-making and communication.[2] Core structural elements—plot, characters, setting, temporality, and perspective—organize events into coherent wholes that retrospectively attribute significance, distinguishing the raw "story" from its discursive presentation.[1][3] In psychological and social contexts, narratives enable empathetic understanding, identity formation, and adaptive responses to uncertainty by simulating causal chains and social dynamics.[4][5] While narratives foster collective knowledge transmission and individual wellbeing, their interpretive flexibility underscores their role in both illuminating and potentially reshaping perceptions of reality through selective emphasis and framing.[6][7]