The narrative technique of moving between multiple characters' inner lives, each with equal validity, creating polyphonic rather than hierarchical consciousness.
Rather than maintaining a single narrative authority, Murasaki Shikibu moves fluidly among different characters' perspectives, granting each genuine interiority. A rival receives the same sympathetic depth as a beloved; peripheral figures develop surprising complexity. This polyphonic structure resists the novel's tendency toward privileging a single consciousness or viewpoint. No character monopolizes understanding; instead, truth emerges through the interplay of different subjective experiences. For novelists considering form, Shikibu's practice suggests that the novel's fundamental power may lie in its capacity to honor multiple perspectives simultaneously. Rather than settling into comfortable identification with a protagonist, readers encounter the democratic principle that all consciousness possesses equal dignity and interest. This fragmented perspective complicates easy judgments and moral clarity, instead creating a form that mirrors the actual complexity of social existence where everyone experiences themselves as central while remaining peripheral to others' stories. Multiple interiorities become both structural principle and philosophical stance.
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