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Point of View The angle of vision from which a story is told. To uncover the type of point of view, answer these three questions: 1. Who is the narrator? 2. What part does the narrator play in the story? 3. What are the limits of the narrator’s knowledge of characters’ thoughts and feelings?

Point of View The angle of vision from which a story is told. To uncover the type of point of view, answer these three questions: 1. Who is the narrator?

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Page 1: Point of View The angle of vision from which a story is told. To uncover the type of point of view, answer these three questions: 1. Who is the narrator?

Point of ViewThe angle of vision from which a story is told.To uncover the type of point of view, answer these three questions:1. Who is the narrator?2. What part does the narrator play in the story?3. What are the limits of the narrator’s knowledge of characters’ thoughts and feelings?

Page 2: Point of View The angle of vision from which a story is told. To uncover the type of point of view, answer these three questions: 1. Who is the narrator?

Narrator• The voice or character who is telling the story.• The narrator of a story is not the author! The author

“creates” the narrator• The type of narrator chosen is deliberate; it affects the

meaning of the entire story.• Changing the narrator changes the point of view,

which can greatly impact the story.

Page 3: Point of View The angle of vision from which a story is told. To uncover the type of point of view, answer these three questions: 1. Who is the narrator?

Types of Point-of-View• There are two types:

– First-Person– Third-Person

Page 4: Point of View The angle of vision from which a story is told. To uncover the type of point of view, answer these three questions: 1. Who is the narrator?

First-Person point of view• Called “first person” because first

person pronouns (I, me, we, us, our) are used.

• The narrator can be a major character (the story is told by and is chiefly about the narrator).

• The narrator can be a minor character (the narrator tells a story that focuses on someone else, but the narrator is still a character in the story.)

Page 5: Point of View The angle of vision from which a story is told. To uncover the type of point of view, answer these three questions: 1. Who is the narrator?

Why use First-Person?• First-person point of view offers

immediacy. The reader perceives what the individual “I” perceives in “real time.” We experience it as the narrator experiences it.

Page 6: Point of View The angle of vision from which a story is told. To uncover the type of point of view, answer these three questions: 1. Who is the narrator?

Third-Person Narrator• Called third-person because third-

person pronouns (he, him, she, her, they, them) are used.

• The narrator doesn’t always have to be a participant in what’s going on in the story.

Page 7: Point of View The angle of vision from which a story is told. To uncover the type of point of view, answer these three questions: 1. Who is the narrator?

Types of 3rd Person Narrator:

• Objective 3rd Person– The narrator knows nothing about what other

characters are thinking or feeling. The narrator merely describes what others say and do. Think of a surveillance camera.

• Limited Omniscient– The narrator knows the thoughts and feelings of only

one character but not the others.• Omniscient 3rd Person

– Narrator knows the thoughts and feelings of all characters and can freely tell us everything.

Page 8: Point of View The angle of vision from which a story is told. To uncover the type of point of view, answer these three questions: 1. Who is the narrator?

Special Types of Narrators• Naïve or Innocent Narrator—a narrator that fails to

understand all of the implications in a story.• Unreliable Narrator—story is told by a person who is

deceptive, deluded, deranged, or has reasons to distort the truth.

Page 9: Point of View The angle of vision from which a story is told. To uncover the type of point of view, answer these three questions: 1. Who is the narrator?

DON’T FORGET:• The choice of point of view is critical to the

overall meaning of the story. • You must ask “why?” Why did the author

choose this particular narrator and this type of point of view? What was the author’s intention?

Page 10: Point of View The angle of vision from which a story is told. To uncover the type of point of view, answer these three questions: 1. Who is the narrator?

What type of point of view does Something Wicked This Way Comes use? How do you know?

How would the story be different if it were in another point of view? Why?

Page 11: Point of View The angle of vision from which a story is told. To uncover the type of point of view, answer these three questions: 1. Who is the narrator?

Assignment:Pick a key scene from Something Wicked This Way Comes that involves Mr. Dark. Re-tell the scene from his point of view (first person). So you will pretend to BE Mr. Dark and explain your thoughts/feelings about what is going on and the other characters. Suggested Scenes:Ch. 18, Will and Jim meet Mr. DarkCh. 24, Mr. Dark reveals Mr. ElectricoCh. 35, Mr. Dark meets Mr. Halloway

Page 12: Point of View The angle of vision from which a story is told. To uncover the type of point of view, answer these three questions: 1. Who is the narrator?

You re-telling of the scene should be about 3 paragraphs long and involve:Mr. Dark’s thoughts, feelings, and motivations, as well as what happens in the scene.