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Point of View Day 2. 18 April 2012. Nonparticipant Point of View. Third person Third person pronouns: he, him, she, her, they, them Three types of third person Third person omniscient Third person limited omniscient Dramatic (objective) narrator. Third Person Omniscient.
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Point of View Day 2 18 April 2012
Nonparticipant Point of View • Third person • Third person pronouns: he, him, she, her, they, them • Three types of third person • Third person omniscient • Third person limited omniscient • Dramatic (objective) narrator
Third Person Omniscient • All-knowing narrator who can see into the minds of all the characters • Can move through time and space in order to reveal any information that the reader needs • Knows everything, sees everything
Third person Limited (Selective) Omniscient • The narrator limits his/her omniscience to the experience and perception of a single character or a few characters • Knows everything that one characters or a few characters know
Dramatic (objective) narrator • The unseen narrator does not enter anyone’s mind: rather, he/she records what is seen and heard • A hidden video camera • Narrator never talks about a character’s emotions or thoughts, only talks about action and observations
Second Person Point of View • Uses second person pronouns- you, your, yourself • Uncommon because it pulls the reader into the story, and unless done skillfully, it can be awkward • Usually the reader is an uncomfortable participant in the story because the story is outside their life
Why Do Author’s Use Nonparticipant Point of View? • Third person omniscient describes what characters are feeling, thinking, and doing- it is straightforward and upfront type of story • The third-person omniscient narrator is all knowing and can give both the “big picture” (the world) and the “small picture” (characters’ lives) • Third person omniscient can explain to the reader the importance or significance of a situation or event
Why Do Author’s Use Nonparticipant Point of View? Continued • Third person omniscient gives the author flexibility since the narrator is all knowing • Third person limited can also be effective- the character narrating maintains certain “space” • Third person limited omniscient is more like real life- the narrator is a teller of the story and knows some but not all
Why Do Author’s Use Nonparticipant Point of View? Continued • Dramatic (objective) point of view is revealed through the readers’ inferences- the author does not attempt to comment on or interpret the characters’ actions, thoughts, or feeling