Narrative structure of A Song of Ice and Fire creates a fictional world with realistic measures of social complexity
Thomas Gessey-Jones, Colm Connaughton, Robin Dunbar, Ralph Kenna,, P\'adraig MacCarron, Cathal O'Conchobhair, Joseph Yose

TL;DR
This study uses network science to analyze the narrative structure of A Song of Ice and Fire, revealing that its social networks and event timing mirror real-world patterns, aiding reader engagement.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the novel's social network structure and death intervals reflect real-world social and temporal patterns, providing a quantitative basis for narrative realism.
Findings
Social networks remain stable and similar to real-world networks.
Character connectivity reflects human cognitive limits.
Death intervals follow power-law distributions, indicating realism.
Abstract
Network science and data analytics are used to quantify static and dynamic structures in George R.R. Martin's epic novels, A Song of Ice and Fire, works noted for their scale and complexity. By tracking the network of character interactions as the story unfolds, it is found that structural properties remain approximately stable and comparable to real-world social networks. Furthermore, the degrees of the most connected characters reflect a cognitive limit on the number of concurrent social connections that humans tend to maintain. We also analyse the distribution of time intervals between significant deaths measured with respect to the in-story timeline. These are consistent with power-law distributions commonly found in inter-event times for a range of non-violent human activities in the real world. We propose that structural features in the narrative that are reflected in our actual…
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