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Elements of Literature

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Title: Elements of Literature


1
Elements of Literature Point of View Who Tells
the Story?
  • by John Leggett

2
Overview
  • Narrator - The person telling the story who may
    or may not be a character in the story.
  • First-person - Narrator participates in action
    but sometimes has limited knowledge/vision.
  • Second person - Narrator addresses the reader
    directly as though she is part of the story.
    (i.e. You walk into your bedroom.  You see
    clutter everywhere and)
  • Third Person (Objective) - Narrator is
    unnamed/unidentified (a detached observer). Does
    not assume character's perspective and is not a
    character in the story. The narrator reports on
    events and lets the reader supply the meaning.
  • Omniscient - All-knowing narrator (multiple
    perspectives). The narrator knows what each
    character is thinking and feeling, not just what
    they are doing throughout the story.  This type
    of narrator usually jumps around within the text,
    following one character for a few pages or
    chapters, and then switching to another character
    for a few pages, chapters, etc. Omniscient
    narrators also sometimes step out of a particular
    characters mind to evaluate him or her in some
    meaningful way.
  • Limited Narrator is not all-knowing.

3
Whos Talking? 
  • Youve probably noticed, in your life as well as
    in books, that who is telling a story has a lot
    to do with what gets told. The standpoint from
    which a story is told is called point of view.
    There are three points of view youre likely to
    come across in your reading and use in your
    writing third-person omniscient, first person,
    and third-person limited.

4
The Know it all
  • In a story told from the third-person omniscient
    point of view, the narrator is outside the story
    and knows everything that happens and everything
    that goes on in the minds of all the characters 
  • As the musher lay trying to recover, he realized
    how much trouble he was in. The dogs could be
    miles away by now, he thought, wincing. Above
    the gully, Obeah growled and pulled the team
    around. He knew they had to get back to their
    musherbut how? 
  • The omniscient narrator can describe the thoughts
    and feelings of different characters in the
    story. This narrator may also reveal information
    unknown to some or all of the charactersincluding
    what is happening in several places at the same
    time. This point of view reminds the reader of an
    important truth that there is more than one side
    to every story. 

5
Me, Me, Me
  • The first-person point of view is the I point
    of view. Writers normally use the first person
    when they tell stories about their own lives. If
    youve ever written a letter or kept a diary,
    youve almost certainly written in the first
    person. Like nearly all autobiographies, Gary
    Paulsens Woodsong is told from the first-person
    point of view of the writer 
  • Shock and pain came in waves and I had to close
    my eyes several times. All of this was in
    minutes that seemed like hours, and I realized
    that I was in serious trouble. 

6
Me, Me, Me
  • In fiction narrated from the first-person point
    of view, the I who speaks is not the writer but
    a character in the story. That character is
    usually the main character, but not always. If
    Paulsen rewrote Woodsong as a novel, he might
    choose to tell it from the first-person point of
    view of his lead dog 
  • I was having the time of my life tearing down
    that new trail at the head of the team. All of a
    sudden I noticed how light the sled felt. 
  • I looked around, and there was our musher lying
    on the ice down in the gully. 

7
Reliable Narrator?
  • Just like people, narrators can lie or
    exaggerate.
  • In a first-person point of view, the Narrator is
    a character, so is still subject to all human
    flaws.
  • So ask yourself
  • Fact or opinion?
  • Whats his/her personality?
  • Is there any motive to lie?

8
He Said, She Said 
  • In the third-person limited point of view, the
    story is also told from a single characters
    standpointbut here the character is referred to
    in the third person, as he or she 
  • Shock and pain came in waves and Paulsen had to
    close his eyes several times. All of this was in
    minutes that seemed like hours, and he realized
    that he was in serious trouble. 

9
He Said, She Said 
  • This point of view is popular with fiction
    writers because it allows them to give the reader
    information that the character would be unlikely
    to providesuch as a description of his or her
    own appearance.
  • (I have beautiful, shiny black hair and big
    brown eyes with long lashes sounds a little
    strange unless the character is supposed to be
    conceited.) 

10
He Said, She Said 
  • When you read a story told from the first-person
    or the third-person limited point of view, you
    share the thoughts and feelings of a single
    character and know only what he or she knows.
  • Most writers of fiction published today tell
    their stories from the point of view of one
    character to help make the stories realistic.
  • After all, we each go through life seeing things
    from only one persons point of viewour own. 
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