Using Structures Respectfully
Appreciation vs appropriation in narrative architecture
The Core Principle
World Wizards teaches narrative ARCHITECTURE—organizational systems for structuring stories. These frameworks come from cultural traditions with deep histories and meanings.
But respect requires understanding boundaries between architectural learning and cultural appropriation.
What You're Learning
✓ Narrative Architecture
How to organize story elements using different structural systems
- Web patterns vs. linear plots
- Conflict patterns and resolution approaches
- Time concepts and narrative progression
- Character structure and focus
What You're NOT Learning
✗ Cultural Identity
Using a narrative architecture DOES NOT make you:
- Anansi storyteller (Akan tradition)
- Griot (Mandé tradition)
- Aboriginal elder (Dreamtime keeper)
- Egyptian priest (Ma'at keeper)
These are cultural roles requiring deep community membership, training, and recognition. You cannot claim them through using a structure.
Respectful Use
Here's how to use these structures appropriately:
1. Acknowledge the Source
"This story uses Anansi web architecture from West African Akan tradition."
Not: "I'm telling an African story" or "This is authentic African storytelling."
2. Use the Architecture, Not the Content
Apply the structural system to YOUR story with YOUR characters and YOUR cultural context.
Not: Writing about Anansi himself, using sacred terminology, or retelling traditional stories without proper research and permission.
3. Don't Claim Expertise
You learned a structure, not a culture.
Not: "As someone who understands African storytelling..." or "I've studied Griot traditions..."
4. Recognize Limitations
These are educational tools teaching structural concepts, not comprehensive cultural education.
To truly engage with a tradition, you'd need: language study, cultural immersion, community relationships, traditional training.
Example Scenarios
✓ Respectful Use
Scenario: Science fiction writer uses Anansi web architecture for multi-threaded space opera.
Why it's OK: Using organizational system (web pattern) with own cultural context (sci-fi future). Acknowledges Akan source. Doesn't claim to be writing "African stories."
✓ Respectful Use
Scenario: Romance writer uses Griot spiral time for generational family saga.
Why it's OK: Applying time structure (past/present simultaneity) to own story. Credits Mandé tradition. Doesn't claim Griot status.
✗ Appropriation
Scenario: Writer creates "modern Griot character" without cultural knowledge or community connection.
Why it's problematic: Griot is a specific cultural role requiring training and community recognition. Using the term without understanding trivializes the tradition.
✗ Appropriation
Scenario: Writer uses Songline structure to tell "Aboriginal-inspired fantasy" without Aboriginal consultation or cultural knowledge.
Why it's problematic: Songlines are sacred knowledge systems. Using them without proper understanding or permission crosses into cultural appropriation.
When in Doubt
Ask yourself:
- Am I using the STRUCTURE or claiming the CULTURE?
- Could someone from this tradition read my work without feeling misrepresented?
- Am I attributing the source properly?
- Am I staying within my knowledge boundaries?
If you're unsure whether your use crosses into appropriation, err on the side of caution. Better to use a different structure than to misrepresent a culture.
Resources for Deeper Learning
If a cultural tradition resonates with you and you want to engage more deeply:
- Study the source language
- Read books by writers from that tradition
- Support cultural organizations preserving these traditions
- Build relationships with people from source communities
- Hire sensitivity readers from the culture if writing about it
- Never present yourself as an authority on a culture not your own
Questions About Cultural Respect?
If you're unsure whether your use of a structure is respectful, email us: cultural@griotswell.com
We're committed to helping writers use these structures appropriately and respectfully.