point of view and voice

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Point of View and Voice

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Point of View and Voice. Point of view. The vantage point or perspective of the narrator. How might changing the point of view change the reader’s perception of the story?. Omniscient P.O.V. The observer is not a character in the story Is godlike or all knowing - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Point of View and Voice

Point of View and Voice

Page 2: Point of View and Voice

Point of viewThe vantage point or perspective of the

narrator.

How might changing the point of view change the reader’s perception of the story?

Page 3: Point of View and Voice

Omniscient P.O.V.The observer is not a character in the story

Is godlike or all knowing

Can see into every character’s heart and mind

Uses the pronouns “he,” “she,” and “they”

Page 4: Point of View and Voice

Omniscient P.O.V ExampleThe frown on the bachelor’s face

was deepening to a scowl. He was a hard, unsympathetic man, the aunt decided in her mind. . . .

The smaller girl created a diversion by beginning to recite “On the Road to Mandalay.” She only knew the first line, but she put her limited knowledge to the fullest possible use. . . . It seemed to the bachelor as though someone had had a bet with her that she could repeat the line aloud two thousand times without stopping.

from “The Storyteller” by Saki

Page 5: Point of View and Voice

First Person P.O.VStory is told by a character within the story (usually the

protagonist)

Uses the pronouns “I” and “we”

Literary critics often use the term persona to refer to this first person narrator

What are the benefits of using a first person narrator?

Why might an author choose NOT to use a first person narrator?

Page 6: Point of View and Voice

Unreliable NarratorA narrator is not reliable when he or she misleads or misinforms

readersHow so?He or she could be …

A) mentally ill (insane) Examples?B) telling only part of the truth, lying, or exaggerating Why do

this? C) lacking insight or knowledge about a situationD) piecing together a memoryE) a child or immature narrator Examples?

Do we always know an author is unreliable? Why might an author include an unreliable narrator? What effects result from having an unreliable narrator?

Page 7: Point of View and Voice

Bias• A person has a bias when he or

she favors some things (people, activities, events, qualities, etc.) over others.

• A person’s individual biases are shaped by his or her personal experiences.

• WE ALL HAVE BIASES.

• Every person will perceive an event differently because of his or her biases.

Page 8: Point of View and Voice

Third Person Limited P.O.V.The observer is NOT a character in the story. Focuses on the perspective of one characterPlot events are limited to what this one

character experiences or observes.Does not know what all characters are

thinking or feelingUses the pronouns “he,” “she,” and “they”

Page 9: Point of View and Voice

Third person limited p.o.v.

“Hot in here,” he muttered to himself. Then, from the short hallway at his back, he heard the muffled clang of wire coat hangers in the closet, and at this reminder of what his wife was doing he thought: hot – guilty conscience.

From “Contents of the Dead Man’s Pocket” by Jack Finney

Page 10: Point of View and Voice

Determining P.O.VWho is telling the story?

How much does the narrator know and understand?

Can I trust the narrator?

In what ways would the story be different if someone else were telling it?

How much does this narrator want me to know?

Page 11: Point of View and Voice

Objective vs. subjective view Objective view – not influenced by personal

feelings; factual Subjective view – influenced by personal

feelings

An omniscient narrator reveals an objective view

A first person narrator reveals a subjective view

Page 12: Point of View and Voice

Choosing P.O.V. Limited ------------------------------------Complete understanding understanding

Subjective --------------------------------- Objective view view

First Person Third Person limited Omniscient

Page 13: Point of View and Voice

Voice A character or author’s distinctive use of

languageA) Choice of words (diction)B) Attitude (tone)

Page 14: Point of View and Voice

DictionChoice of words and phrases

Connotation is the feeling of a word (generally agreed upon within a culture)

Positive connotation: proud, self-confident, secure

Negative connotation: self-involved, cocky, egotistical, full of himself

Neutral connotation: desk, pencil, telephone, etc.

Page 15: Point of View and Voice

DictionMore examples:

Strong-willed

Independent

Stubborn

Bossy

Page 16: Point of View and Voice

ToneThe attitude a speaker OR writer takes toward a

subject, character, or reader.

May be sympathetic, critical, humorous, tragic, hopeful, bitter, etc.

A madman’s tone would be different from a saintly mother’s tone

Tone is most greatly influence by diction (choice of words)

Page 17: Point of View and Voice

Mood vs. ToneThe mood and tone of a story may be the

same, or they may be different.How so?Remember: Mood is the atmosphere of the

story (influenced by elements of setting)Mood is how the reader feelsTone is how the speaker or writer feels

Page 18: Point of View and Voice

Tone examples See notes.