A House with an Unsteady Foundation : A Narrative Equilibrium Look at The House in the Cerulean Sea
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This thesis examines how the minimization of sustained conflict affects narrative progression and character transformation in T. J. Klune’s The House in the Cerulean Sea. The study applies Tzvetan Todorov’s model of narrative equilibrium as a structural framework and analyzes the novel on three interconnected levels: macro, meso, and micro. These are compared with analogous patterns in selected works of tension-driven fantasy in order to identify systematic differences in the operation of the five stages of narrative equilibrium.
The analysis shows that in traditional fantasy narratives, successive disruptions generate cumulative pressure that produces transformation through risk, partial repair, and lasting consequences. In The House in the Cerulean Sea, by contrast, disruptions are repeatedly resolved at the local level and equilibrium is rapidly restored. Narrative progression therefore occurs through confirmation rather than through irreversible change. As a result, character development is presented as immediate ethical realignment rather than as transformation through sustained conflict.
The findings indicate that the reduction of tension alters both the tone of the narrative and its underlying progression logic. Comfort is produced structurally through the neutralization of contradiction, which limits the accumulation of causal and moral pressure required for proportionally earned transformation. The thesis thus argues that low-conflict fantasy operates according to a distinct narrative logic in which equilibrium is repeatedly re-established without structural escalation.