concept in narratology: presentation of a sequence of events in a narrative work
Plot is the sequence of events that happen in a story, presented in a particular order by the author or storyteller. It matters because the way these events are arranged and connected shapes how audiences understand and experience the narrative.
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Story events numbered chronologically (fabula); the red events are a subset, connected logically by "so". This basic plot maps as a cause‐and‐effect sequence of main events. In a literary work, film, or other narrative, the plot is the mapping of events in which each one (except the final) affects at least one other. Plot is similar in meaning to the term storyline. Simple plots, such as in a traditional ballad, can be linearly sequenced, but plots can form complex interwoven structures, with each part sometimes referred to as a subplot.
E. M. Forster described plot events as relating through the principle of cause-and-effect; the causal events of a plot can be thought of as a selective collection of events from a narrative, all linked by the connector "and so". According to American science fiction writer Ansen Dibell, the term plot highlights important points which have consequences within the story, in the narrative sense. The premise sets up the plot, the characters take part in events, while the setting is not only part of, but also influences, the final story.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).