Introduction
Where Stories Become Power
Politics is a struggle for the right to explain what is happening.
Who gets to call a crisis a crisis, and who calls it a necessary stage? Who says ‘enemy’, and who says ‘threat’? Who promises a future, and who promises stability instead? Who turns fear into mobilisation and doubt into betrayal?
Facts exist in politics. Facts never live by themselves. A fact without a story is mute. A story without facts is dangerous. But it is stories that win.
A person cannot live in a bare set of data. A person needs meaning even if that meaning is destructive.
States do not collapse when they run out of resources but rather when the narrative that explains why these resources have any meaning in the first place stops working. Revolutions do not start with slogans and barricades but with the feeling that the official version of reality no longer describes lived experience. Power is held by force and laws, but first and foremost — by the right to the plot: the right to define what was, what is, and what must be.
This book on political narratology is an attempt to describe politics not as a set of institutions, procedures, and decisions, but as a space of competing stories. Stories about the past that legitimise the present. Stories about the future that justify today’s sacrifices. Stories about ‘us’ and ‘them’, about heroes and traitors, about salvation and catastrophe.
Modern political analysis often assumes that politics is a struggle of interests, resources, and rational strategies. In this logic, narratives are considered secondary: decoration, propaganda, or manipulation layered over the ‘real’ material foundation.
However, recent decades show the opposite. Facts have ceased to be self-sufficient. Data does not convince without interpretation. Rational arguments do not work unless they are embedded within a broader story that gives them meaning.
Political reality increasingly exists as a lived plot. People act because this plot fits their worldview, confirms a collective identity, and explains their anxiety and uncertainty.
This is precisely where the need for political narratology arises.
The Collective ‘We’ as Illusion and as Force
The strongest political character is not a leader or a party. It is the collective we. It never exists on its own. It is created through language, rituals, symbols, repetition. The collective ’we’ is always imagined, but it acts in very real ways.
In the name of we, people agree to things they would never agree to. In the name of ‘we’, violence, patience, silence, and sacrifices are justified. In the name of ‘we’, the ‘I’ disappears.
Political narratology begins with the recognition of a simple and unpleasant fact: the stronger the story, the less room there is for the individual.
Why This Book is More Dangerous Than the Previous Ones
The theory of narratology is relatively safe. It explains mechanisms. Applied narratology is riskier. It gives you tools.
Political narratology is dangerous by definition. Because it deals with the consciousness of the masses. And where there are masses, the temptation to control them always appears.
This book does not teach manipulative skills. But it shows how manipulation works. Knowledge is almost always ambiguous: you can use it to defend yourself, and you can abuse it.
This Book is Not About ‘Other Regimes’
The most convenient misconception is to think that political narratives exist ‘somewhere else’. In other countries. In dictatorships. In propaganda. In reality, they exist wherever there is fear of being rejected, a desire to belong, fatigue from uncertainty, and a thirst for simple answers to complex problems.
Democracy differs from authoritarianism not by the absence of narratives, but by the number of competing stories and the ability to challenge them.
When a story ceases to be a subject of discussion, it becomes an instrument of power.
The Refusal to Think as a Form of Submission
Modern people often say, ‘I am apolitical.’ It sounds like freedom. In practice, it is a form of capitulation.
Politics does not disappear when we stop thinking about it. It simply starts happening without us.
Refusing to understand is not neutrality. It is handing over the right of interpretation to others.
Why I Wrote This Book
I did not write it to expose, and certainly not to lecture. I wrote it because I see that we live in an era where stories spread faster than awareness, where emotions outpace thinking, where complexity is displaced by convenient simplicity.
The book arose from a feeling that people are increasingly living inside stories they did not choose, did not realise, and did not have time to verify. That their actions, fears, hopes, and even language are increasingly pre-prepared by someone else, for some other purpose, according to a logic that does not require consent, only participation.
Political narratology is an attempt to restore a person’s ability to see the form of a story, not just its content. This book does not offer another universal theory or instruction manual for power. It provides an optic, a way of seeing political reality as a narrative construct that is created, maintained, destroyed, and reassembled anew.
The Narratives Will Remain
Political systems crumble, leaders leave or are re-elected, borders change. But stories remain. They pass from era to era, changing words and faces but preserving their structure.
The question is not whether we can live without narratives. It is already obvious that we cannot.
The question is different: do we realise the story we are living inside, or is that story living through us?
The Aims of This Book
This book has several objectives:
1. To show that narrative is not a by-product of politics but its structural foundation.
2. To describe the architecture of resilient political narratives.
3. To understand how narratives survive crises and why they collapse.
4. To analyse the emergence of counter-narratives and their fate.
5. To consider how the digital environment is changing the production and competition of political stories.
How to Read This Book
This book does not require specialised training in any single discipline and does not offer the reader ready-made answers. It gives a way to look and to see. And if, after reading it, political events begin to be perceived not as a chaotic stream of news but as elements of competing stories, the book’s purpose will have been achieved.
Who This Book is For
This book is addressed to those working at the intersection of disciplines: political scientists, philosophers, sociologists, media researchers, cultural scholars, as well as anyone who feels that the familiar language for describing politics is no longer adequate for what is happening.
Epigraphs
The epigraphs have been carefully chosen to precisely anchor a new stage of the argument. Those marked as [paraphrased] are concise distillations of core ideas from the authors’ works rather than verbatim quotations.