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Narration

Narration is the use of a written or spoken commentary to convey a story to an audience.[1] Narration is conveyed by a narrator: a specific person, or unspecified literary voice, developed by the creator of the story to deliver information to the audience, particularly about the plot: the series of events. Narration is a required element of all written stories (novels, short stories, poems, memoirs, etc.), presenting the story in its entirety. It is optional in most other storytelling formats, such as films, plays, television shows and video games, in which the story can be conveyed through other means, like dialogue between characters or visual action.

The narrative mode, which is sometimes also used as synonym for narrative technique, encompasses the set of choices through which the creator of the story develops their narrator and narration:

  • Narrative point of view, perspective, or voice: the choice of grammatical person used by the narrator to establish whether or not the narrator and the audience are participants in the story; also, this includes the scope of the information or knowledge that the narrator presents
  • Narrative tense: the choice of either the past or present grammatical tense to establish either the prior completion or current immediacy of the plot
  • Narrative technique: any of the various other methods chosen to help narrate a story, such as establishing the story's setting (location in time and space), developing characters, exploring themes (main ideas or topics), structuring the plot, intentionally expressing certain details but not others, following or subverting genre norms, employing certain linguistic styles and using various other storytelling devices.

Thus, narration includes both who tells the story and how the story is told (for example, by using stream of consciousness or unreliable narration). The narrator may be anonymous and unspecified, or a character appearing and participating within their own story (whether fictitious or factual), or the author themself as a character. The narrator may merely relate the story to the audience without being involved in the plot and may have varied awareness of characters' thoughts and distant events. Some stories have multiple narrators to illustrate the storylines of various characters at various times, creating a story with a complex perspective.

Point of view edit

An ongoing debate has persisted regarding the nature of narrative point of view. A variety of different theoretical approaches have sought to define point of view in terms of person, perspective, voice, consciousness and focus.[2] Narrative perspective is the position and character of the storyteller, in relation to the narrative itself.[3] There is, for instance, a common distinction between first-person and third-person narrative, which Gérard Genette refers to as intradiegetic and extradiegetic narrative, respectively.[4]

Literary theory edit

The Russian semiotician Boris Uspenskij identifies five planes on which point of view is expressed in a narrative: spatial, temporal, psychological, phraseological and ideological.[5] The American literary critic Susan Sniader Lanser also develops these categories.[6]

The psychological point of view focuses on the characters' behaviors. Lanser concludes that this is "an extremely complex aspect of point of view, for it encompasses the broad question of the narrator's distance or affinity to each character and event…represented in the text".[7]

The ideological point of view is not only "the most basic aspect of point of view" but also the "least accessible to formalization, for its analysis relies to a degree, on intuitive understanding".[8] This aspect of the point of view focuses on the norms, values, beliefs and Weltanschauung (worldview) of the narrator or a character. The ideological point of view may be stated outright—what Lanser calls "explicit ideology"—or it may be embedded at "deep-structural" levels of the text and not easily identified.[9]

First-person edit

A first-person point of view reveals the story through an openly self-referential and participating narrator. First person creates a close relationship between the narrator and reader, by referring to the viewpoint character with first person pronouns like I and me (as well as we and us, whenever the narrator is part of a larger group).[10]

Second-person edit

Mohsin Hamid's The Reluctant Fundamentalist and Gamebooks, including the American Choose Your Own Adventure and British Fighting Fantasy series (the two largest examples of the genre), are not true second-person narratives, because there is an implicit narrator (in the case of the novel) or writer (in the case of the series) addressing an audience. This device of the addressed reader is a near-ubiquitous feature of the game-related medium, regardless of the wide differences in target reading ages and role-playing game system complexity. Similarly, text-based interactive fiction, such as Colossal Cave Adventure and Zork, conventionally has descriptions that address the user, telling the character what they are seeing and doing. This practice is also encountered occasionally in text-based segments of graphical games, such as those from Spiderweb Software, which make ample use of pop-up text boxes with character and location descriptions. Most of Charles Stross's novel Halting State is written in second person as an allusion to this style.[11][12]

Third-person edit

In the third-person narrative mode, the narration refers to all characters with third person pronouns like he, she, or they, and never first- or second-person pronouns.[13]

Omniscient or limited edit

Omniscient point of view is presented by a narrator with an overarching perspective, seeing and knowing everything that happens within the world of the story, including what each of the characters is thinking and feeling. The inclusion of an omniscient narrator is typical in nineteenth-century fiction including works by Charles Dickens, Leo Tolstoy and George Eliot.[14]

Some works of fiction, especially novels, employ multiple points of view, with different points of view presented in discrete sections or chapters, including The English Patient by Michael Ondaatje, The Emperor's Children by Claire Messud and the A Song of Ice and Fire series by George R. R. Martin. The Home and the World, written in 1916 by Rabindranath Tagore, is another example of a book with three different point-of-view characters. In The Heroes of Olympus series, the point of view alternates between characters at intervals. The Harry Potter series focuses on the protagonist for much of the seven novels, but sometimes deviates to other characters, particularly in the opening chapters of later novels in the series, which switch from the view of the eponymous Harry to other characters (for example, the Muggle Prime Minister in the Half-Blood Prince).[15][non-primary source needed]

Examples of Limited or close third-person point of view, confined to one character's perspective, include J.M. Coetzee's Disgrace.[16]

Subjective or objective edit

Subjective point of view is when the narrator conveys the thoughts, feelings and opinions of one or more characters.[17] Objective point of view employs a narrator who tells a story without describing any character's thoughts, opinions, or feelings; instead, it gives an objective, unbiased point of view.[17]

Alternating- or multiple-person edit

While the tendency for novels (or other narrative works) is to adopt a single point of view throughout the entire novel, some authors have utilized other points of view that, for example, alternate between different first-person narrators or alternate between a first- and a third-person narrative mode. The ten books of the Pendragon adventure series, by D. J. MacHale, switch back and forth between a first-person perspective (handwritten journal entries) of the main character along his journey as well as a disembodied third-person perspective focused on his friends back home.[18]

In Indigenous American communities, narratives and storytelling are often told by a number of elders in the community. In this way, the stories are never static because they are shaped by the relationship between narrator and audience. Thus, each individual story may have countless variations. Narrators often incorporate minor changes in the story in order to tailor the story to different audiences.[19]

The use of multiple narratives in a story is not simply a stylistic choice, but rather an interpretive one that offers insight into the development of a larger social identity and the impact that has on the overarching narrative, as explained by Lee Haring.[20]

Haring provides an example from the Arabic folktales of One Thousand and One Nights to illustrate how framing was used to loosely connect each story to the next, where each story was enclosed within the larger narrative. Additionally, Haring draws comparisons between Thousand and One Nights and the oral storytelling observed in parts of rural Ireland, islands of the Southwest Indian Ocean and African cultures such as Madagascar.

"I'll tell you what I'll do," said the smith. "I'll fix your sword for you tomorrow, if you tell me a story while I'm doing it." The speaker was an Irish storyteller in 1935, framing one story in another (O'Sullivan 75, 264). The moment recalls the Thousand and One Nights, where the story of "The Envier and the Envied" is enclosed in the larger story told by the Second Kalandar (Burton 1: 113-39), and many stories are enclosed in others."[20]

Tense edit

In narrative past tense, the events of the plot occur before the narrator's present.[21] This is by far the most common tense in which stories are expressed. This could be in the narrator's distant past or their immediate past, which for practical purposes is the same as their present. Past tense can be used regardless of whether the setting is in the reader's past, present, or future.

In narratives using present tense, the events of the plot are depicted as occurring in the narrator's current moment of time. A recent example of novels narrated in the present tense are those of the Hunger Games trilogy by Suzanne Collins. Present tense can also be used to narrate events in the reader's past. This is known as "historical present".[22] This tense is more common in spontaneous conversational narratives than in written literature, though it is sometimes used in literature to give a sense of immediacy of the actions. Screenplay action is also written in the present tense.

The future tense is the most rare, portraying the events of the plot as occurring some time after the narrator's present. Often, these upcoming events are described such that the narrator has foreknowledge (or supposed foreknowledge) of their future, so many future-tense stories have a prophetic tone.

Technique edit

Stream-of-consciousness edit

Stream of consciousness gives the (typically first-person) narrator's perspective by attempting to replicate the thought processes—as opposed to simply the actions and spoken words—of the narrative character.[23] Often, interior monologues and inner desires or motivations, as well as pieces of incomplete thoughts, are expressed to the audience but not necessarily to other characters. Examples include the multiple narrators' feelings in William Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury and As I Lay Dying, and the character Offred's often fragmented thoughts in Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale. Irish writer James Joyce exemplifies this style in his novel Ulysses.

Unreliable narrator edit

Unreliable narration involves the use of an untrustworthy narrator. This mode may be employed to give the audience a deliberate sense of disbelief in the story or a level of suspicion or mystery as to what information is meant to be true and what is meant to be false. Unreliable narrators are usually first-person narrators; a third-person narrator may also be unreliable.[24] An example is J.D. Salinger's The Catcher in the Rye, in which the novel's narrator Holden Caulfield is biased, emotional and juvenile, divulging or withholding certain information deliberately and at times probably quite unreliable.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Hühn, Peter; Sommer, Roy (2012). "Narration in Poetry and Drama". The Living Handbook of Narratology. Interdisciplinary Center for Narratology, University of Hamburg.
  2. ^ Chamberlain, Daniel Frank (1990). Narrative Perspective in Fiction: A Phenomenological Meditation of Reader, Text, and World. ITHAKA. ISBN 9780802058386. JSTOR 10.3138/j.ctt2ttgv0.
  3. ^ James McCracken, ed. (2011). The Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. Retrieved 16 October 2011.
  4. ^ Narrative Discourse: An Essay in Method. Translated by Lewin, Jane E. Foreword by Jonathan Culler. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. 1980. p. 228. ISBN 0-8014-9259-9. LCCN 79013499. OL 8222857W. from the original on 4 October 2023. Retrieved 4 October 2023.
  5. ^ Boris Uspensky, A Poetics of Composition: The Structure of the Artistic Text and Typology of Compositional Form, trans. Valentina Zavarin and Susan Wittig (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1973).
  6. ^ Susan Sniader Lanser, The Narrative Act: Point of View in Prose Fiction (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. 1981).
  7. ^ Lanser, 201–02.
  8. ^ Uspensky, 8.
  9. ^ Lanser, 216–17.
  10. ^ Wyile, Andrea Schwenke (1999). "Expanding the View of First-Person Narration". Children's Literature in Education. 30 (3): 185–202. doi:10.1023/a:1022433202145. ISSN 0045-6713. S2CID 142607561.
  11. ^ "Halting State, Review". Publishers Weekly. 1 October 2007.
  12. ^ Charles Stross. "And another thing".
  13. ^ Paul Ricoeur (15 September 1990). Time and Narrative. University of Chicago Press. pp. 89–. ISBN 978-0-226-71334-2.
  14. ^ Herman, David; Jahn, Manfred; Ryan (2005), Routledge Encyclopedia of Narrative Theory, Taylor & Francis, p. 442, ISBN 978-0-415-28259-8
  15. ^ Rowling, J.K. (2005). Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. London: Bloomsbury. pp. 6–18. ISBN 978-0-7475-8108-6.
  16. ^ Mountford, Peter. "Third-Person Limited: Analyzing Fiction's Most Flexible Point of View". Writer's Digest. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  17. ^ a b Dynes, Barbara (2014). "Using Third Person". Masterclasses in Creative Writing. United Kingdom: Constable & Robinson. ISBN 978-1-47211-003-9. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  18. ^ White, Claire E. (2004). "D.J. MacHale Interview". The Internet Writing Journal. Writers Write. Retrieved 25 January 2023.
  19. ^ Piquemal, 2003. From Native North American Oral Traditions to Western Literacy: Storytelling in Education.
  20. ^ a b Haring, Lee (27 August 2004). "Framing in Oral Narrative". Marvels & Tales. 18 (2): 229–245. doi:10.1353/mat.2004.0035. ISSN 1536-1802. S2CID 143097105.
  21. ^ Walter, Liz (26 July 2017). "When no one was looking, she opened the door: Using narrative tenses". cambridge.org. Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  22. ^ Schiffrin, Deborah (March 1981). "Tense Variation in Narrative". Language. 57 (1): 45–62. doi:10.2307/414286. ISSN 0097-8507. JSTOR 414286.
  23. ^ "stream of consciousness – literature".
  24. ^ Murphy, Terence Patrick; Walsh, Kelly S. (2017). "Unreliable Third Person Narration? The Case of Katherine Mansfield". Journal of Literary Semantics. 46 (1): 67–85. doi:10.1515/jls-2017-0005. S2CID 171741675.

Further reading edit

  • Rasley, Alicia (2008). The Power of Point of View: Make Your Story Come to Life (1st ed.). Cincinnati, Ohio: Writer's Digest Books. ISBN 978-1-59963-355-8.
  • Card, Orson Scott (1988). Characters and Viewpoint (1st ed.). Cincinnati, Ohio: Writer's Digest Books. ISBN 978-0-89879-307-9.
  • Fludernik, Monika (1996). Towards a "Natural" Narratology. London: Routledge.
  • Genette, Gérard. Narrative Discourse. An Essay in Method. Transl. by Jane Lewin. Oxford: Blackwell 1980 (Translation of Discours du récit).
  • Stanzel, Franz Karl. A theory of Narrative. Transl. by Charlotte Goedsche. Cambridge: CUP 1984 (Transl. of Theorie des Erzählens).

narration, this, article, about, using, commentary, present, story, other, strategies, used, present, stories, narrative, technique, narrator, redirects, here, other, uses, narrator, disambiguation, written, spoken, commentary, convey, story, audience, conveye. This article is about using a commentary to present a story For other strategies used to present stories see Narrative technique Narrator redirects here For other uses see Narrator disambiguation Narration is the use of a written or spoken commentary to convey a story to an audience 1 Narration is conveyed by a narrator a specific person or unspecified literary voice developed by the creator of the story to deliver information to the audience particularly about the plot the series of events Narration is a required element of all written stories novels short stories poems memoirs etc presenting the story in its entirety It is optional in most other storytelling formats such as films plays television shows and video games in which the story can be conveyed through other means like dialogue between characters or visual action The narrative mode which is sometimes also used as synonym for narrative technique encompasses the set of choices through which the creator of the story develops their narrator and narration Narrative point of view perspective or voice the choice of grammatical person used by the narrator to establish whether or not the narrator and the audience are participants in the story also this includes the scope of the information or knowledge that the narrator presents Narrative tense the choice of either the past or present grammatical tense to establish either the prior completion or current immediacy of the plot Narrative technique any of the various other methods chosen to help narrate a story such as establishing the story s setting location in time and space developing characters exploring themes main ideas or topics structuring the plot intentionally expressing certain details but not others following or subverting genre norms employing certain linguistic styles and using various other storytelling devices Thus narration includes both who tells the story and how the story is told for example by using stream of consciousness or unreliable narration The narrator may be anonymous and unspecified or a character appearing and participating within their own story whether fictitious or factual or the author themself as a character The narrator may merely relate the story to the audience without being involved in the plot and may have varied awareness of characters thoughts and distant events Some stories have multiple narrators to illustrate the storylines of various characters at various times creating a story with a complex perspective Contents 1 Point of view 1 1 Literary theory 1 2 First person 1 3 Second person 1 4 Third person 1 4 1 Omniscient or limited 1 4 2 Subjective or objective 1 5 Alternating or multiple person 2 Tense 3 Technique 3 1 Stream of consciousness 3 2 Unreliable narrator 4 See also 5 Notes 6 Further readingPoint of view editAn ongoing debate has persisted regarding the nature of narrative point of view A variety of different theoretical approaches have sought to define point of view in terms of person perspective voice consciousness and focus 2 Narrative perspective is the position and character of the storyteller in relation to the narrative itself 3 There is for instance a common distinction between first person and third person narrative which Gerard Genette refers to as intradiegetic and extradiegetic narrative respectively 4 Literary theory edit The Russian semiotician Boris Uspenskij identifies five planes on which point of view is expressed in a narrative spatial temporal psychological phraseological and ideological 5 The American literary critic Susan Sniader Lanser also develops these categories 6 The psychological point of view focuses on the characters behaviors Lanser concludes that this is an extremely complex aspect of point of view for it encompasses the broad question of the narrator s distance or affinity to each character and event represented in the text 7 The ideological point of view is not only the most basic aspect of point of view but also the least accessible to formalization for its analysis relies to a degree on intuitive understanding 8 This aspect of the point of view focuses on the norms values beliefs and Weltanschauung worldview of the narrator or a character The ideological point of view may be stated outright what Lanser calls explicit ideology or it may be embedded at deep structural levels of the text and not easily identified 9 First person edit Main article First person narrative A first person point of view reveals the story through an openly self referential and participating narrator First person creates a close relationship between the narrator and reader by referring to the viewpoint character with first person pronouns like I and me as well as we and us whenever the narrator is part of a larger group 10 Second person edit See also Category Second person narrative fiction Mohsin Hamid s The Reluctant Fundamentalist and Gamebooks including the American Choose Your Own Adventure and British Fighting Fantasy series the two largest examples of the genre are not true second person narratives because there is an implicit narrator in the case of the novel or writer in the case of the series addressing an audience This device of the addressed reader is a near ubiquitous feature of the game related medium regardless of the wide differences in target reading ages and role playing game system complexity Similarly text based interactive fiction such as Colossal Cave Adventure and Zork conventionally has descriptions that address the user telling the character what they are seeing and doing This practice is also encountered occasionally in text based segments of graphical games such as those from Spiderweb Software which make ample use of pop up text boxes with character and location descriptions Most of Charles Stross s novel Halting State is written in second person as an allusion to this style 11 12 Third person edit Third person perspective redirects here For the graphical perspective in video games see Third person view In the third person narrative mode the narration refers to all characters with third person pronouns like he she or they and never first or second person pronouns 13 Omniscient or limited edit Omniscient point of view is presented by a narrator with an overarching perspective seeing and knowing everything that happens within the world of the story including what each of the characters is thinking and feeling The inclusion of an omniscient narrator is typical in nineteenth century fiction including works by Charles Dickens Leo Tolstoy and George Eliot 14 Some works of fiction especially novels employ multiple points of view with different points of view presented in discrete sections or chapters including The English Patient by Michael Ondaatje The Emperor s Children by Claire Messud and the A Song of Ice and Fire series by George R R Martin The Home and the World written in 1916 by Rabindranath Tagore is another example of a book with three different point of view characters In The Heroes of Olympus series the point of view alternates between characters at intervals The Harry Potter series focuses on the protagonist for much of the seven novels but sometimes deviates to other characters particularly in the opening chapters of later novels in the series which switch from the view of the eponymous Harry to other characters for example the Muggle Prime Minister in the Half Blood Prince 15 non primary source needed Examples of Limited or close third person point of view confined to one character s perspective include J M Coetzee s Disgrace 16 Subjective or objective edit Subjective point of view is when the narrator conveys the thoughts feelings and opinions of one or more characters 17 Objective point of view employs a narrator who tells a story without describing any character s thoughts opinions or feelings instead it gives an objective unbiased point of view 17 Alternating or multiple person edit Main article Multiperspectivity While the tendency for novels or other narrative works is to adopt a single point of view throughout the entire novel some authors have utilized other points of view that for example alternate between different first person narrators or alternate between a first and a third person narrative mode The ten books of the Pendragon adventure series by D J MacHale switch back and forth between a first person perspective handwritten journal entries of the main character along his journey as well as a disembodied third person perspective focused on his friends back home 18 In Indigenous American communities narratives and storytelling are often told by a number of elders in the community In this way the stories are never static because they are shaped by the relationship between narrator and audience Thus each individual story may have countless variations Narrators often incorporate minor changes in the story in order to tailor the story to different audiences 19 The use of multiple narratives in a story is not simply a stylistic choice but rather an interpretive one that offers insight into the development of a larger social identity and the impact that has on the overarching narrative as explained by Lee Haring 20 Haring provides an example from the Arabic folktales of One Thousand and One Nights to illustrate how framing was used to loosely connect each story to the next where each story was enclosed within the larger narrative Additionally Haring draws comparisons between Thousand and One Nights and the oral storytelling observed in parts of rural Ireland islands of the Southwest Indian Ocean and African cultures such as Madagascar I ll tell you what I ll do said the smith I ll fix your sword for you tomorrow if you tell me a story while I m doing it The speaker was an Irish storyteller in 1935 framing one story in another O Sullivan 75 264 The moment recalls the Thousand and One Nights where the story of The Envier and the Envied is enclosed in the larger story told by the Second Kalandar Burton 1 113 39 and many stories are enclosed in others 20 Tense editIn narrative past tense the events of the plot occur before the narrator s present 21 This is by far the most common tense in which stories are expressed This could be in the narrator s distant past or their immediate past which for practical purposes is the same as their present Past tense can be used regardless of whether the setting is in the reader s past present or future In narratives using present tense the events of the plot are depicted as occurring in the narrator s current moment of time A recent example of novels narrated in the present tense are those of the Hunger Games trilogy by Suzanne Collins Present tense can also be used to narrate events in the reader s past This is known as historical present 22 This tense is more common in spontaneous conversational narratives than in written literature though it is sometimes used in literature to give a sense of immediacy of the actions Screenplay action is also written in the present tense The future tense is the most rare portraying the events of the plot as occurring some time after the narrator s present Often these upcoming events are described such that the narrator has foreknowledge or supposed foreknowledge of their future so many future tense stories have a prophetic tone Technique editMain article List of narrative techniques Stream of consciousness edit Main article Stream of consciousness narrative mode Stream of consciousness gives the typically first person narrator s perspective by attempting to replicate the thought processes as opposed to simply the actions and spoken words of the narrative character 23 Often interior monologues and inner desires or motivations as well as pieces of incomplete thoughts are expressed to the audience but not necessarily to other characters Examples include the multiple narrators feelings in William Faulkner s The Sound and the Fury and As I Lay Dying and the character Offred s often fragmented thoughts in Margaret Atwood s The Handmaid s Tale Irish writer James Joyce exemplifies this style in his novel Ulysses Unreliable narrator edit Main article Unreliable narrator Unreliable narration involves the use of an untrustworthy narrator This mode may be employed to give the audience a deliberate sense of disbelief in the story or a level of suspicion or mystery as to what information is meant to be true and what is meant to be false Unreliable narrators are usually first person narrators a third person narrator may also be unreliable 24 An example is J D Salinger s The Catcher in the Rye in which the novel s narrator Holden Caulfield is biased emotional and juvenile divulging or withholding certain information deliberately and at times probably quite unreliable See also editNarrative structure Opening narration Pace narrative Voice overNotes edit Huhn Peter Sommer Roy 2012 Narration in Poetry and Drama The Living Handbook of Narratology Interdisciplinary Center for Narratology University of Hamburg Chamberlain Daniel Frank 1990 Narrative Perspective in Fiction A Phenomenological Meditation of Reader Text and World ITHAKA ISBN 9780802058386 JSTOR 10 3138 j ctt2ttgv0 James McCracken ed 2011 The Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Retrieved 16 October 2011 Narrative Discourse An Essay in Method Translated by Lewin Jane E Foreword by Jonathan Culler Ithaca Cornell University Press 1980 p 228 ISBN 0 8014 9259 9 LCCN 79013499 OL 8222857W Archived from the original on 4 October 2023 Retrieved 4 October 2023 Boris Uspensky A Poetics of Composition The Structure of the Artistic Text and Typology of Compositional Form trans Valentina Zavarin and Susan Wittig Berkeley CA University of California Press 1973 Susan Sniader Lanser The Narrative Act Point of View in Prose Fiction Princeton NJ Princeton University Press 1981 Lanser 201 02 Uspensky 8 Lanser 216 17 Wyile Andrea Schwenke 1999 Expanding the View of First Person Narration Children s Literature in Education 30 3 185 202 doi 10 1023 a 1022433202145 ISSN 0045 6713 S2CID 142607561 Halting State Review Publishers Weekly 1 October 2007 Charles Stross And another thing Paul Ricoeur 15 September 1990 Time and Narrative University of Chicago Press pp 89 ISBN 978 0 226 71334 2 Herman David Jahn Manfred Ryan 2005 Routledge Encyclopedia of Narrative Theory Taylor amp Francis p 442 ISBN 978 0 415 28259 8 Rowling J K 2005 Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince London Bloomsbury pp 6 18 ISBN 978 0 7475 8108 6 Mountford Peter Third Person Limited Analyzing Fiction s Most Flexible Point of View Writer s Digest Retrieved 28 July 2020 a b Dynes Barbara 2014 Using Third Person Masterclasses in Creative Writing United Kingdom Constable amp Robinson ISBN 978 1 47211 003 9 Retrieved 28 July 2020 White Claire E 2004 D J MacHale Interview The Internet Writing Journal Writers Write Retrieved 25 January 2023 Piquemal 2003 From Native North American Oral Traditions to Western Literacy Storytelling in Education a b Haring Lee 27 August 2004 Framing in Oral Narrative Marvels amp Tales 18 2 229 245 doi 10 1353 mat 2004 0035 ISSN 1536 1802 S2CID 143097105 Walter Liz 26 July 2017 When no one was looking she opened the door Using narrative tenses cambridge org Cambridge University Press Retrieved 28 July 2020 Schiffrin Deborah March 1981 Tense Variation in Narrative Language 57 1 45 62 doi 10 2307 414286 ISSN 0097 8507 JSTOR 414286 stream of consciousness literature Murphy Terence Patrick Walsh Kelly S 2017 Unreliable Third Person Narration The Case of Katherine Mansfield Journal of Literary Semantics 46 1 67 85 doi 10 1515 jls 2017 0005 S2CID 171741675 Further reading editRasley Alicia 2008 The Power of Point of View Make Your Story Come to Life 1st ed Cincinnati Ohio Writer s Digest Books ISBN 978 1 59963 355 8 Card Orson Scott 1988 Characters and Viewpoint 1st ed Cincinnati Ohio Writer s Digest Books ISBN 978 0 89879 307 9 Fludernik Monika 1996 Towards a Natural Narratology London Routledge Genette Gerard Narrative Discourse An Essay in Method Transl by Jane Lewin Oxford Blackwell 1980 Translation of Discours du recit Stanzel Franz Karl A theory of Narrative Transl by Charlotte Goedsche Cambridge CUP 1984 Transl of Theorie des Erzahlens Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Narration amp oldid 1218078534 Third person, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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