Narratives are the organising framework of VCE Media. This heading covers the entire domain of how stories are structured, told, and understood across media forms — from film and television to digital and online content.
A media narrative is a constructed sequence of events, characters, and situations communicated through a media product. Unlike real life, narratives are always shaped by deliberate choices: what to include, what to omit, how to order events, and which perspective to adopt.
All media narratives are constructions. They do not simply reflect reality — they shape and interpret it through the deliberate use of codes, conventions, and storytelling techniques.
Media narratives are found across every form:
- Film: character arcs, plot structure, genre conventions
- Television: episodic or serial storytelling, cliffhangers, recurring characters
- News: selection of events, framing, source prioritisation
- Advertising: compressed narratives that position products and lifestyles
- Social media: personal and brand-driven micro-narratives
Most media narratives draw on established structural frameworks:
| Framework | Description |
|---|---|
| Linear narrative | Events told in chronological order (beginning → middle → end) |
| Non-linear narrative | Events told out of order — flashbacks, flash-forwards |
| Multi-strand narrative | Several storylines running simultaneously |
| Circular narrative | Ends where it begins |
Understanding narrative structure allows analysts to identify how meaning is organised and how audiences are positioned to make sense of events.
Narrative conventions are the agreed-upon “rules” of storytelling within a genre or form. They include:
Codes and conventions are not limitations — they are the shared vocabulary between producers and audiences that makes storytelling efficient and resonant.
Audiences do not passively receive narratives — they actively engage with them:
The same narrative can produce very different meanings depending on the cultural background, age, gender, or media literacy of the audience member.
At the heart of narrative study is the question: what does this story mean, and how does it mean it?
Meaning in media narratives is conveyed through:
- Selection: which events are included and which are left out
- Ordering: the sequence in which events are presented
- Perspective: whose point of view anchors the story
- Resolution: how conflicts are resolved (or left unresolved)
Analysing narrative means asking not just “what happened?” but “why was it told this way, and what values does that reflect?”
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Narrative | A structured account of events |
| Plot | The specific sequence of events as presented |
| Story | All events, including those implied but not shown |
| Protagonist | The central character whose journey drives the narrative |
| Antagonist | The force or character opposing the protagonist |
| Diegesis | The world of the story |
| Verisimilitude | The appearance of reality within a fictional narrative |