Тёмный

Points of View in Literature 

WarnerJordanEducation
Подписаться 19 тыс.
Просмотров 121 тыс.
50% 1

The point of view of a text and the perspective and reliability of a narrator can play a large role in understanding a text and that text's theme. Explore first person, third person - limited, and third person-omniscient narrators and how those influence texts.

Развлечения

Опубликовано:

 

30 июн 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 23   
@benlamine7940
@benlamine7940 7 лет назад
Thank you for all these clarifications
@JackiePhillipsTheSocialPet
@JackiePhillipsTheSocialPet 10 месяцев назад
Great breakdown and description!
@war001531
@war001531 11 лет назад
I think I might have gotten this design from Microsoft directly by going to "themes" and then searching "online themes." I certainly didn't make it myself! Thanks for watching!
@karishmasingh7316
@karishmasingh7316 4 года назад
Thq sir i really appreciate this lesson nd u also
@muzliya
@muzliya 5 лет назад
Thanks! ^^
@danielquezada2919
@danielquezada2919 9 лет назад
Intresting
@shintabrth
@shintabrth 4 года назад
What approach do you use to analyse the question?
@professordrabhijitsayamber2299
@professordrabhijitsayamber2299 2 года назад
Om shanti k good day please find attached the following ad listing has ended on June and July
@samkerla721
@samkerla721 11 лет назад
where did you get the ppt design from
@jawadsyed2641
@jawadsyed2641 Год назад
what about FIGURAL NARRATIVE SITUATION ? is it the same as 3rd person limited point of view ???
@____wicked.witch.of.the.words_
Nice.
@kamryngrier613
@kamryngrier613 12 лет назад
great video
@outragedamerican1149
@outragedamerican1149 8 лет назад
what about second person narrative?
@jojomckillop4603
@jojomckillop4603 4 года назад
outraged american bruh no one uses that it’s irrelevant
@v.estigal2531
@v.estigal2531 4 года назад
JoJo McKillop 4 years ago lmao there not asking that question anymore😭
@quillink3817
@quillink3817 4 года назад
Hi, if you're writing in third person limited, when does / can / should the narrator narrate from the narrator's point of view / voice instead of the character's voice? When does a narrator want to 'back away' from the character's perspective, to step in and narrate using the narrator's own voice? Please let me know! I'm trying to plan a story and am thinking third person limited would be best for it, for that closeness it achieves by allowing the reader to feel that closeness to the character and so the story is unraveling through a main character, rather than the story being told by a narrator who may seem always on the outside. So, when would a narrator want to 'back away' from the character's perspective, to step in and narrate? that is my first question if you have the time and insight! 'The owl was soft and warm' - are thoughts and feelings from Tommy's pov, vs, 'Tommy thought the owl felt soft and warm' which is from the narrator describing what Tommy felt and thought. Am I understanding the differences correctly? Also, what are your thoughts on this..while keeping with third person limited, I kind of want my narrator (who is not a character in the story, just some outside entity) to have a personality and maybe comment on things every now and then, occasionally chime in with his own voice and/or address the reader directly. Is what I am describing omniscient because it breaks away from that close perspective of one main character, or is the narrator just allowed to chime in here and there because he's the narrator? is what i'm describing still third person limited, mostly taking place from the point of view of the main character, just sometimes from a distance with a (voicey) narrator? Can a narrator comment on the owl perched on the branch outside the boy's window, if the boy is asleep? I think I might want my narrator to be able to say little things like that every now and then, even though I know the main character isn't around, or may be asleep, or, I may want to have the narrator simply chime in with his own thoughts and feelings, or just simply narrate with his own voice instead of the main character's, for instance if I want to set scene or describe the weather or something brief - either at a distance from and/or without using the main character's voice, briefly. Maybe something like how the narrator in A Christmas Carol can comment and describe things, while other times, passages seem like they're written in Scrooge's voice. Thanks for the helpful and informative videos, and knowledge if what I'm describing is something you can help with! an example of a narrator mentioning / describing the seasons, weather, appearances and things other characters are doing elsewhere, while the man character may or may not necessarily be around to observe, report or experience them, which is basically what I'm curious about, is in Harry Potter, when the cold October weather outside the castle was mentioned by the narrator, it read as if it was the narrator narrating about the passing of time and arrival of cool weather and there was no indication that this scene or description was from harry's point of view / perspective. Rather, it seemed as though the narrator was telling the event(s). I believe Harry Potter is written in third person limited. So, I'm just wondering if it's ok, in third person limited, for a narrator to describe things such as weather, architecture, events, character appearances, setting, etc, from (I'm assuming) the narrator's own voice and NOT from the voice of the main character (especially if the main character is asleep or not experiencing the narrated descriptions), possibly to set the scene or speed up time or whatever is needed for the story, even when the main character may be away or asleep or elsewhere. Can the author decide to have the narrator narrate these bits of narration description if they want to give the reader info that maybe is not necessary to do through the main character's thoughts, feelings, and presence, and also when the author doesn't want to use the main character's voice to describe something because it's not necessary and / or they just want to use the narrator's voice? Please let me know if this makes sense, sorry if it's confusing! I think I'm over thinking a basic concept of what (third person limited) narration actually is and does in a story - because the rules for third person vs omniscient always state that the rules for third person limit is only access to one main character's thoughts and feelings while third person omniscient can describe any and all things, thoughts and feelings, but what I am having trouble grasping is what a narrator in third person limited is allowed to do, the rules, BESIDES character thoughts and feelings. the basic question is what is a third person narrator allowed (and not allowed) to do (aside from character thoughts and feelings, because I understand in third limited it's one main character's thoughts and feelings at a time and omniscient is any or all.) So, what are the rules for a third person limited narrator when it comes to everything else? I guess I'm trying to figure out if it's ok for a third person narrator to say whatever they want (I understand in third person limited the reader is getting the story through one character's thoughts and feelings at a time, so that's not what I'm talking about). I'm talking about is it ok for the narrator to sort of distance themselves from the main character for a moment to describe something: an event, an appearance, weather, time, setting, anything they want other than thoughts and feelings of other characters, using their own narrator voice (even at the risk if distancing the reader because I don't think mentioning the snowy day, etc is that jarring, and it may be necessary to move the pace along)? I should mention my story is for younger ages and so my idea or thinking is the narrator has a personality, so I'd like him to be able to describe some stuff in his own voice and possibly even chime in here and there, maybe addressing the reader. But I want the story to be written in third person limited to develop a closeness with the main character. Can this be done?
@samuelalvarez944
@samuelalvarez944 9 лет назад
Good video
@jamitha1
@jamitha1 10 лет назад
i like pineapple pie that's me i am the guy with pineapple pie yea buddy that's me with the pineapple pie yea yea yea pineapple pie yea yea yea
@gabriellakhan2309
@gabriellakhan2309 3 года назад
not me replying 6 years later. hope your safe in these crazy times
@shuyingwu3600
@shuyingwu3600 4 года назад
were is 2nd
@TM-xz1mi
@TM-xz1mi 3 года назад
There is no 2nd POV
Далее
Hyperbole
6:42
Просмотров 10 тыс.
What's an Unreliable Narrator | Writing Tutorial
3:54
Understanding theme | Reading | Khan Academy
6:18
Просмотров 1,1 млн
Writing in 2nd Person | The Forgotten POV
24:30
Просмотров 11 тыс.
POV: point of view
9:31
Просмотров 790 тыс.
What is Point of View?
2:05
Просмотров 361 тыс.
How to Write in 3rd Person Limited POV
9:27
Просмотров 21 тыс.
How POV affects readers | Reading | Khan Academy
5:14
Идеальный день ребёнка😂
0:11
Просмотров 3,1 млн
Опасные облака!😱🌩
0:20
Просмотров 3,6 млн