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Category:Causality in fiction ontology: Difference between revisions

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This is a Category for the concept of how causality applies to narratives centering around individual lives, or specific spacetime-unique historical events that tightly connect themselves with the lives and experiences of individuals. <i>(Example: <cite>Warriors</cite> book 1 chronicles the life of Firestar; <cite>Warriors: Dawn of the Clans</cite> chronicles unique historical events around the creation of ThunderClan and the life of Thunderstar.)</i> This Category is mostly meant to be in reference to fiction, but in some cases it can include biographies and memoirs when the way they are told happens to follow the same broad rules of structure, framing, and kinds of contained events that will then inform how fictional narratives are made.
== Causality in biographies ==
{{HueCSS}}<ol class="hue clean compound">
{{HueNumber|Q60,53}}  <!-- en: The life of a bisexual has at least two endings -->
</ol>
== Fiction and social construction ==
{{HueCSS}}<ol class="hue clean compound">
{{HueNumber|BecauseAuthorSaidSo}}  <!-- en: Fictional events only happen because the author said so -->
</ol>
[[Category:Historical materialism ontology (general-sense)]] [[Category:Art history and criticism ontology]]
[[Category:Historical materialism ontology (general-sense)]] [[Category:Art history and criticism ontology]]

Revision as of 03:27, 17 August 2025

This is a Category for the concept of how causality applies to narratives centering around individual lives, or specific spacetime-unique historical events that tightly connect themselves with the lives and experiences of individuals. (Example: Warriors book 1 chronicles the life of Firestar; Warriors: Dawn of the Clans chronicles unique historical events around the creation of ThunderClan and the life of Thunderstar.) This Category is mostly meant to be in reference to fiction, but in some cases it can include biographies and memoirs when the way they are told happens to follow the same broad rules of structure, framing, and kinds of contained events that will then inform how fictional narratives are made.

Causality in biographies

  1. pronounced [MX]The life of a bisexual has at least two endings 1-1-1

Fiction and social construction

  1. pronounced [S2] Fictional events only happen because the author said so (Deltarune) 1-1-1

Subcategories

This category has the following 3 subcategories, out of 3 total.

Pages in category "Causality in fiction ontology"

The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total.