Title: Point of View
1Point of View
7
- Literature Craft Voice
- Nicholas Delbanco and Alan Cheuse
2Point of view refers to the perspectivefrom
which a story is told.
- At the end of Chapter 7 in Literature Craft
Voice, Nicholas Delbanco and Alan Cheuse outline
the numerous points of view from which authors
may tell their story. - ? First-Person Narrator ? Third-Person
Narrator - ? Second-Person Narrator ? Unreliable Narrator
- ? Naïve Narrator ? Omniscient Narrator
- ? Limited Omniscient Narrator ? Objective Point
of View - ? Editorial Omniscience ? Impartial Omniscience
- ? Interior Monologue ? Stream of Consciousness
3Point of view is just abouteverything in fiction.
- Consider an event or incident that you have
witnessed. - In discussions with other eyewitnesses, did
versions of the facts differ? - Did the other eyewitnesses consider themselves
objective? - Did their interpretation of the event or incident
depend on their positioning or their vantage
point? - Did their interpretation depend on their past
experiences and their character? - In fiction, as in actuality, the story is shaped
by the authors creation of a narrative voice and
the positioning of the voice in relation to the
storys events.
4Point of view is just abouteverything in fiction.
- Two people, like two characters, can relate the
same incident and characterize the same person in
entirely different ways with different emphases
and details, and therefore different conclusions.
When interpreting fiction it is important to
identify the narrative voice.
5Note the importance of point of view not only to
the story Brownies, but also to ZZ Packers
writing process
- I found it very good to begin with that first
person voice because I felt as though I could
just tell the story the way I thought that
Laurel/Snot would. And then I put it in third
person so that I could see some of my blind
spots. This particular third person could see
some things about the rest of the world but might
not have access to everything that Laurel had
access to. So then that allowed me to see beyond
Laurels point of view. So switching the point
of view for me enabled me to get the voice, which
I wanted, which was the first person voice, but
also to get the knowledge and range of
information that sometimes authors can only get
when they travel into the third person point of
view. - - Z. Z. Packer
6Most Commonly Used Points of View
- First-Person Narrator
- The story is narrated by a character in the story
- Identified by use of the pronoun I or the plural
first-person, we. - Consider, for example, Updikes A P and
Faulkners A Rose for Emily. - Third-Person Omniscient
- A narrator who is outside the story.
- The narrator refers to all the characters in the
story with the pronouns he, she, or they. - This narrator observes the thoughts and describes
the actions of multiple characters in the story
with all-knowingness and all-access. - This narrator can reveal the characters inner
most thoughts and emotions and most secretive
actions. - Consider Malamuds The Magic Barrel and Ha
Jins Saboteur. - Third-Person Limited Omniscient Narrator
- A third person who enters into the mind of only
one character at a time. - This narrator serves more as an interpreter than
as a source of the main characters thoughts. - Consider Porters The Jilting of Granny
Weatherall and Hawthornes Young Goodman Brown.
7Variations
- As previously noted, there are other points of
view and variations on those just mentioned.
Consider, for example the following - The Naïve Narrator
- A narrator, generally unreliable, who is unaware
of the full complexity of events in the story,
due to youth, innocence, or cultural awareness. - Are the narrators naïve in Mahfouzs The
Conjuror Made Off with the Dish and Ellisons
Battle Royal? - The Unreliable Narrator
- A narrator who cannot be trusted to present an
undistorted account of the action because of
inexperience, ignorance, personal bias,
intentional deceptiveness, or even insanity. - Are the narrators reliable in Poes The Fall of
the Usher and Weltys Why I Live at the County
P.O? Are these narrators honest? - The Editorial Omniscient Narrator
- A narrator who inserts his or her own commentary
about characters or events into the narrative. - Consider the narrator of Tolstoys The Death of
Ivan Ilych.
8In this quotation from John Updike, consider how
a shift in point of view affects the authors
imagination and the writing process
- Once you break with the first person, then you
do discover the wonderful world of multiple view
points, and you can fly through space, and go
from head to head, and you get out and you become
a character in your own right, you become the
omniscient author presiding. - - John Updike
9Point of View in Brownies
- Brownies actually started out in the first
person point of view, explains Z. Z. Packer,
and then I changed it to the third person point
of view, and then I changed it back to the first
person point of view. The first person can
oftentimes be the most personal point of view
that a writer can employ, but its also
deceptively simple. - The narrator of Brownies, Laurel but called
Snot, looks back at a trip to camp when she was
in the fourth grade and when she and her
African-American brownie troop were almost
pressured into a fight with another troop of
white, mentally disabled campers. - Packer uses a somewhat common but complex
perspective. The narrative voice is that of a
mature woman remembering and depicting her
awareness and sensibilities as a nine-year old. - Consider how this perspective shapes the telling
of the story. How would the story be different if
it were told by a nine-year old who experienced
the events only a few weeks or months ago? Would
the observations be different? Would the
vocabulary change? Would the tone be different?
10Brownies continued
- The slightest shift in point of view has
significant implications on the telling of the
story - Packer, for instance, has her adult narrator
withhold information from the reader, not to
simply set up a surprise ending but rather to
present the consciousness of a child at a pivotal
event in her life. We are not told, for
instance, of the disability of the white girls
until the climax. Until then, the reader and the
narrator only see them from afar, and we are
never within their orbit enough to see whether
their faces were the way all white girls appeared
on TV. - As a result, the reader can more fully experience
the dramatic impact this experience had on the
narrator, as Laurel begins to consider the
complexity of life, specifically racial
relations, her fathers bitterness, authority and
submission, and her own humanity. - Other stories in Literature Craft Voice use
this same perspective. Compare Packers use of
this technique with that of Alice Munros in An
Ounce of Cure, Amy Tans in Two Kinds, and
James Joyces in Araby.
11Point of View in The Short Happy Lifeof Francis
Macomber
- Ernest Hemingway makes judicious use of the
third-person limited omniscient point of view in
The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber. We
can argue that the storys power results from his
crafty use of this perspective. - Hemingway looks mostly into the consciousness of
Robert Wilson. His unspoken thoughts on American
men and women, for instance, and his seemingly
endless calculating make him a fascinating
figure. Throughout the story, we watch Wilson
restrain himself in conversation. - Hemingway also peers into the consciousness of
Macomber, so the reader can watch his profound
transformation take shape and reveal itself.
Consider his thoughts and actions just before the
lion hunt his nervousness during the preceding
night as the lion roars, and his nervousness the
next morning and while hunting. Then, note his
thoughts and actions after he shoots the buffalo
his drunken elation, that in his life he had
never felt so good, that for the first time in
his life he had a feeling of definite elation,
that he felt a wild unreasonable happiness that
he had never known before, and his new wealth.
12Macomber continued
- Hemingway even tells us what the lion is thinking
during the hunt, which establishes sympathy for
the animal and complicates notions of courage. - However, he examines Margots inner works to a
far lesser extent than the other principal
characters revealing her fear of her husbands
change but not exposing her reason for firing the
gun or her thoughts at the end of the story. - Through the use of point of view, Hemingway
creates a story with action as dramatic
internally as externally and gives us an ending
with a question and no definitive answer Did
Margot shoot her husband intentionally?
13Point of View in How to Become a Writer Or, Have
You Earned This Cliché
- Lorrie Moores How to Become a Writer is about
the development of a young girl into a writer.
In a way, the narrator writes a kind of advice or
how-to manual drawing from her own experiences.
Like a how-to manual, she uses the
second-person point of view. - The use of a second-person point of view is rare
in fiction. Here, it fits the unusual form and
content of the story and underscores its theme
and the narrators quest to establish a unique
fictional voice. - Moore makes use of non-traditional presentations
of plots and finds some humor in what might be
called literary pretensions. She develops humor
through sentence rhythms, language, tone, and
self-deprecation. - The conflict might be defined as the narrator
against what seems like a continued unsympathetic
and unaccepting readership, beginning with her
mother, high school teacher, college professor,
classmates, and so on, and her fight against
literary conventions. Her decision to write in
the second person helps establish her commitment
to struggle against conventional expectations.
She has dedicated herself to becoming a writer
and to tolerating discouragement
14Hemingways Response to the Question
- Hemingway was asked the question several times
and provided contradictory answers Francis
wife hates him because hes a coward. But when
he gets his guts back, she fears him so much she
has to kill him shoots him in the back of the
head. - But, another time, he said,No, I dont know
whether she shot him on purpose any more than you
do. I could find out if I asked myself because I
invented it and I could go right on inventing.
But you have to know where to stop. - This is one of those times when we must trust the
tale and our interpretation of the tale, not the
teller.
15Point of View in The Yellow Wallpaper
- The Yellow Wallpaper is written from the
perspective of a first-person narrator. However,
is the narrator reliable? - Not all of the narrators conclusions seem
accurate. For instance, she says that the home
used to be a colonial mansion and her room a
nursery. Yet there are walls and gates that
lock and separate little houses, and her room
has iron window bars, wall rings, a bed
permanently attached to the floor, and gnawed
bedposts. It sounds more like a former
institution for the psychologically ill. Of
course, too, we can question the narrators
certainty about the woman behind the yellow
wallpaper and the group of women creeping around
the garden. - If we agree that the narrator is unreliable, does
this mean that she is dishonest? - Although the narrator may lie to her husband
about writing, overall, we will agree that she is
honest. However, she is emotionally unbalanced,
which makes her unreliable.
16How to Become a Writer continued
- Above all, the narrator values originality and a
unique voice. She opens her imagination and lets
out what might be if not meaningful at least
creative situations and unusual plots. Very
importantly, she realizes that writers are
merely open, helpless texts with no real
understanding of what they have written. This
realization helps her retain her uniqueness. She
does not try to analyze her stories and then
rewrite them in more conventional ways at the
expense of originality. - Her originality is revealed in, among other
elements, her deadpan tone (which can be
humorous, facetious, cynical, sarcastic, and
frustrated), her comically bizarre storylines,
and the use of the second-person narrative voice.
- To an extent, the story is a satire on writing
classes, writing instructors, and audiences, all
of whom, Moore says, might praise an original
voice in Melville but discourage an original
voice in a young writer. - Compare the style of Moores how-to manual with
that of the narrators in Junot Diazs How to
Date a Browngirl, Backgirl, Whitegirl, or
Halfie.
17Yellow Wallpaper continued
- But what has driven her into a state of neurosis
or even psychosis? This question is crucial to
understanding the story. When we consider her
life, we realize that she has never been
permitted to explore her identity and be herself.
As a wife in the late nineteenth century,
particularly a wife of a physician, she was
expected to fulfill certain obligations, which
are derived from her husband and his profession.
However, these obligations have left her
unfulfilled and empty.
- The narrators life is very much like the yellow
wallpaper in her room. The wallpaper, like her
life, is deteriorating from lack of attention.
Furthermore, the pattern of her life has been as
vague and disconnected as the pattern in the
design of the wallpaper. She promises to follow
that pointless pattern to some sort of a
conclusion. The woman she sees behind the
wallpaper represents an image of herself. Like
the woman, the narrator is trapped behind a
pattern or way of life that someone else (a
husband, a culture) has designed for her. Her
deepest self and individuality yearn for
expression and freedom.
18Yellow Wallpaper continued
- Compare for reliability the narrator in The
Yellow Wallpaper and the narrators of Poes The
Fall of the House of Usher and Weltys Why I
Live at the County P.O? Are Poes and Weltys
narrators also unreliable but honest? - Are they unreliable for different reasons?
19For Further Consideration
- Explain how point of view can be used to add
suspense and ambiguity in Brownies, The Short
Happy Life of Francis Macomber, and The Yellow
Wallpaper. - Explain how Brownies, How to Become a Writer,
and The Yellow Wallpaper are stories about
writing. What do they tell us about the birth or
development of a writer? What do they say about
the importance of writing to the author? - Rewrite an excerpt from one of these stories in a
different point of view. You might, for example,
write Brownies from Daphnes perspective,
Francis Macomber from Margots, the husbands
in Yellow Wallpaper, and How to Become a
Writer from he third person.