TSV

Propp's Seven Spheres of Action - TSV

Propp's Seven Spheres of Action is a narrative analysis framework proposed by Soviet folklorist Vladimir Propp in his 1928 work 'Morphology of the Folktale.' Through analysis of over 100 Russian fairy tales, he classified characters into seven functional roles based not on who they are but on what they do. This theory became foundational to structuralist narrative analysis and continues to be widely applied in modern screenwriting, game design, and storytelling.

narrative structure folkloristics structuralism folktale character archetypes narrative analysis
code	slug	name	description	functions
1	villain	Villain (Antagonist)	The antagonist who harms the hero and creates the conflict in the story.	["Villainy/harm","Combat","Pursuit"]
2	donor	Donor (Provider)	The character who provides the hero with magical items or special powers.	["Testing the hero","Provision of magical agent"]
3	helper	Helper	The character who directly assists the hero in overcoming obstacles.	["Spatial transference","Liquidation of lack","Rescue from pursuit","Solution of difficult tasks","Transfiguration of hero"]
4	princess-and-father	Princess (Sought-for Person) and Her Father	The object of rescue or acquisition who functions as the ultimate reward in the story.	["Assignment of difficult tasks","Marking","Exposure of false hero","Recognition","Punishment of villain","Wedding"]
5	dispatcher	Dispatcher	The character who assigns the quest to the hero and sends them on their journey.	["Connective incident","Dispatch of hero"]
6	hero	Hero (Seeker or Victim)	The central character who reacts to misfortune, defeats evil, and restores what was lacking.	["Departure on search","Reaction to donor","Wedding"]
7	false-hero	False Hero (Impostor)	A deceptive character who attempts to take credit for the hero's achievements.	["Unfounded claims"]