Nine Ways
Humanity
Tells Stories
Every culture that has ever existed has built systems for structuring stories. Nine fundamentally different architectural approaches have been identified — each one a complete structural system, each one equal, each one the product of distinct cultural intelligence. This is the complete map.
What Is Story
Architecture?
Story architecture is the underlying structural system that determines how a narrative is organised — not what happens, but the engineering logic of how it is built. Architecture is not style, genre, or theme. It is the load-bearing framework of the story itself.
How the Nine
Architectures Differ
Each architecture answers four structural questions differently. The answers determine everything about how the story is built and what it can produce.
- Linear: Sequential — A causes B causes C
- Spiral: Past and present simultaneously
- Cyclical: As a wheel — return and turning
- Web: Simultaneous threads
- Geographic: Through physical space
- Balance: Disruption to restoration
- Multi-Trial: Repeated encounters
- Negotiation: As transaction exchange
- Non-Conflict: Establishment, then reframe
- Linear: Single individual
- Web: The community
- Spiral: Individual across time / generations
- Cyclical: Community or cosmic forces
- Balance: Order itself
- Geographic: The traveller and the land
- Multi-Trial: Individual learning through repetition
- Negotiation: The weaker party in exchange
- Non-Conflict: The established world
- Linear: Transformation through ordeal
- Web: Pattern completion
- Spiral: Deepened understanding on return
- Cyclical: The wheel turning — ending as beginning
- Balance: Restoration of order
- Geographic: Return transformed
- Multi-Trial: Resolution through accumulated knowledge
- Negotiation: Survival through exchange
- Non-Conflict: Reframe reveals meaning
The Revelation
The research that built GriotsWell produced a discovery about the nature of story architecture across human cultures. Not a theory — a documented finding across 39 identified frameworks from 10 world regions.
What the research revealed
Across decades of research into storytelling traditions from every inhabited continent, examining frameworks from their primary cultural sources — not Western academic interpretations — a structural pattern emerged that changes how we understand story architecture as a whole.
Nine architectures. Built independently. Across every continent.
Thirty-nine story frameworks have been identified across ten world regions spanning six continents. When these frameworks are examined structurally — not by cultural surface but by architectural logic — they organise into nine distinct architecture types. Each type is a fundamentally different answer to the question: how should a story be built?
The discovery is not that one architecture is superior or that others were unknown. The discovery is the precise number and the structural distinctness of each type. Nine architectures — not one, not three, not a spectrum. Nine specific structural systems, each internally coherent, each with multiple cultural expressions built independently by peoples with no contact with each other.
The Akan in Ghana built Web Architecture. The Bantu peoples of Southern Africa built Web Architecture. The Irish and Welsh built Web Architecture. Three regions, no contact, the same structural discovery: community as protagonist, pattern completion as resolution, simultaneous threads as the engine. This is not coincidence — it is evidence that Web Architecture is a genuine structural possibility that different human intelligences arrived at independently.
The same pattern holds across all nine types. Cyclical Architecture appears in the Quechua Andes, in Mayan Mesoamerica, in Dogon West Africa, in Plains Indigenous North America, in Aztec tradition. Geographic Architecture appears in Aboriginal Australian Songlines and Polynesian Navigation Epics — 60,000 years apart. Non-Conflict Architecture appears in Japanese and Chinese traditions independently.
Nine complete structural systems. The complete map of how human cultures build stories. This is what GriotsWell has documented.
39 Origin Frameworks
by Architecture Type
Each framework below is a named story structuring system built by a specific culture from a specific tradition. They are organised by the architecture type they belong to. All nine architecture types are presented as equal structural systems.
The Tools
GriotsWell has built two parallel interactive tool collections that deliver these 39 frameworks to writers. Both cover the same nine architecture types. Both are built on the same research. They are engineered differently for different working contexts.