noun
- In narrative theory, the world or story space in which the events of a narrative take place; the story itself as opposed to how it is told.
- In film and media studies, the space and time that exist within the story, as distinct from the space and time of the audience or the presentation itself.
Usage: literary/academic term; often contrasted with 'mimesis' (showing) and 'discourse' (the manner of telling)
Usage: film/media studies term; diegetic sound or music is sound that exists within the story world
Examples
- In the film, the radio playing in the background is diegetic because it exists within the diegesis.
- The narrator's voice-over commentary exists outside the diegesis and provides external perspective.
- Literary scholars use the term diegesis to describe the internal logic and setting of a fictional world.
- The soundtrack's orchestral score is non-diegetic, while the character's phone ringing is part of the diegesis.
- Understanding the diegesis helps readers distinguish between what happens in the story and how the author presents it.