"Narrator" Essays and Research Papers

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    The Tell-Tale Heart

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    The-Tell Heart Person characteristic of the main character The main character is a man‚ who seems to be a butler for an old man. He is a least taking care of the old man. Even though he loves the old man and the old man never have caused him any harm‚ he needs to kill him. “I loved the old man. He had never wronged me. He had never given me insult. For his gold I had no desire. I think it was his eye! Yes‚ it was this!“ The main character means that the old mans eye is cursed or evil and it makes

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    The Seven Key Elements of Fiction: 1.  CHARACTER There are two meanings for the word character:  1) The person in a work of fiction.  2) The characteristics of a person. Persons in a work of fiction - Antagonist and Protagonist o        One character is clearly central to a story with all major events having some connection to this character; o        She/he is the PROTAGONIST.  o        The character in opposition to the main character is called the ANTAGONIST. The Characteristics of a

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    Analysis Wife Of His Youth

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    Khazhyki Alena Wife of His Youth (by Charles Chesnutt) The story under analysis belongs to the pen of the famous American author‚ essayist‚ political activist and lawyer Charles Waddel Chesnutt. First of all I would like to tell about the author. Charles Waddell Chesnutt was born in Cleveland‚ Ohio‚ on June 20‚ 1858‚ the son of two free African-Americans who had moved north from Fayetteville‚ North Carolina‚ two years earlier. Both of his grandmothers were of mixed-race‚ while it is probable that

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    The Bluest Eye Analysis

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    Carter 3 Taylor Carter December 12‚ 2014 A6 Krygier The Bluest Eye The Bluest Eye is a tragic story about a young girl black girl‚ named Pecola. Pecola’s life is told from the point of views of herself‚ Claudia‚ and an omniscient narrator. Throughout The Bluest Eye‚ Pecola is told she is ugly from a very young age. She believes that the only way she can be beautiful and accepted is if she has blue eyes like the white actress‚ Shirley Temple‚ or the white dolls she gets every year for Christmas.

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    Essay on The Dramatic Point of View of "Hills Like White Elephants" This story‚ Hills Like White Elephants‚ is taken form the Objective (dramatic) point of view where the author is the narrator. The author doesn’t enter the mind of the characters at any time. He allows us only to see the characters as we would in real life. This is sometimes called the dramatic point of view. The only way we‚ the reader‚ learn anything about them is through what they say about themselves. If the story were

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    Point of View

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    #1 The speaker of the story‚ who speaks as a first-person narrator‚ is not named. We may conclude that he has had a good deal of experience with small boats‚ and with the language of sailors. His concentration shifts in the course of the story. At first‚ he seems to be aware of all four men on the boat‚ collectively‚ and he makes observations that permit us to understand the ideas and responses of the men‚ who are linked in a virtual “brotherhood” because of their having been stranded on a tiny

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    Who Makes the Journey

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    the poem is mainly about the narrator and her growing well trying to grow up way too fast and that only women move on with thier lives and men only look back at the old stuff. It als Also that if you keep on moving forward you are going to meet new poeple so in the poem she puts that she tells her mother to hurry so she was the one who was moving on with her life and she was trying to have a follower so she told her mother to hurry up. Attitude the narrators attitude is good she is not mad

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    Characterization

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    appearance‚ thoughts and what the other characters in the narrative or drama say or think about him. There are two types of characterization: explicit characterization and implicit characterization. Explicit characterization is when the story narrator describes the characters himself‚ for instance describing in detail the color of a character’s eyes‚ or directly specifying whether he is honest or deceitful. Implicit characterization on the other hand is when the audience is left to deduce the

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    Analysis of Miss Brill

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    ease dropping. This is pointed out in the story when the narrator says: "sitting in other people’s lives just for a minute while they talked round her." The Third person shows Miss Brill to be a Sad and lonely old woman. This point of view is the only way that that truth could be told. The outcome of any story could be different if the point of view were different. Miss Brill Would never admit to crying. Al though the narrator didn’t say that she did in the end. The reader reads: "But

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    point of view as he flees to the land of Canada to evade the drafting: that in fear‚ he gains the courage and strength to return to the U.S and face the inevitable war. Susan Farrell communicates in "The Vietnam in Me" that “[e]ven though the young narrator believed the war was morally wrong‚ he was unable to defy the traditions and expectations he had been raised with [;] [h]e was afraid of what people would say about him should he flee the draft‚ and he could not . . . leave behind everything he knew

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