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EWRT 30 Class 8
AGENDA

  Terms 1-8

  Review: POV and Plot
  Discussion: Fiction

  Lecture: Character and Setting
1.
         1.   Character
               Character
        2.
         2.   Flat characters
               Flat characters
        3.
         3.   Round characters
               Round characters
        4.
         4.   Protagonist
               Protagonist
        5.
         5.   Antagonist
               Antagonist
        6.
         6.   Motivation
               Motivation
        7.
         7.   Plot
               Plot
        8.
         8.   Chronological Order
               Chronological Order




Terms
1. Protagonist: The protagonist or hero
1. Protagonist: The protagonist or hero
   is the central character in the story
    is the central character in the story
   who engages our interest or
    who engages our interest or
   sympathy. Sometimes, the term
    sympathy. Sometimes, the term
   protagonist is preferable to hero,
    protagonist is preferable to hero,
   because the central character can be
    because the central character can be
   despicable as well as heroic.
    despicable as well as heroic.
2. Antagonist: the character or force
2. Antagonist: the character or force
   that opposes the antagonist.
    that opposes the antagonist.
3. Character: an imagined person in a literary work.
3. Character: an imagined person in a literary work.
4. Flat characters: are one-dimensional figures with
4. Flat characters: are one-dimensional figures with
   simple personalities. They show none of the
    simple personalities. They show none of the
   human depth, complexity, and contrariness of a
    human depth, complexity, and contrariness of a
   round character or of most real people.
    round character or of most real people.
5. Round characters are complex figures. A round
5. Round characters are complex figures. A round
   character is a full, complex, multidimensional
    character is a full, complex, multidimensional
   character whose personality reveals some of the
    character whose personality reveals some of the
   richness and contradictoriness we are
    richness and contradictoriness we are
   accustomed to observing in actual people, rather
    accustomed to observing in actual people, rather
   than the transparent obviousness of a flat
    than the transparent obviousness of a flat
   character. We may see a significant change take
    character. We may see a significant change take
   place in a round character during the story.
    place in a round character during the story.
7. Motivation is the external forces
7. Motivation is the external forces
   (setting, circumstances) and internal
    (setting, circumstances) and internal
   forces (personality, temperament,
    forces (personality, temperament,
   morality, intelligence) that compel a
    morality, intelligence) that compel a
   character to act as he or she does in a
    character to act as he or she does in a
   story.
    story.
8. Plot: the artistic arrangement of events
8. Plot: the artistic arrangement of events
   in a story.
    in a story.
9. Chronological Order: the story is told in
9. Chronological Order: the story is told in
   the order in which things happen. It
    the order in which things happen. It
   begins with what happens first, then
    begins with what happens first, then
   second, and so on, until the last incident
    second, and so on, until the last incident
   is related.
    is related.
The Review   Review: In your groups,
              Review: In your groups,
             discuss plot and POV. Consider
              discuss plot and POV. Consider
             the three stories from your
              the three stories from your
             reading
              reading


             Plot and POV
             “The Tell Tale Heart”
             “A Very Short Story”
             “Dr. Chevalier’s Lie”
Climax: The turning point. The most
   Plot Line       intense moment (either mentally or in
                   action). The conflict is generally
                   addressed here.


        Rising Action: the
        series of conflicts
        and crisis in the
        story that lead to           Falling Action: all of the
        the climax.                  action that follows the Climax.



    Conflict: Struggle between
    opposing forces                      Resolution: The conclusion; the
                                         tying together of all of the
Exposition: The start of the             threads.
story. The way things are before
the action starts.
The Tell Tale        Climax: The narrator kills the old man,
 Heart                cuts up the body, and hides it under the
                      floor

         Rising Action:
                                        Falling Action:
         2. The narrator makes
                                        1.The police show up and he shows
         a noise and wakes the
                                        them the house. They settle in
         man up: he opens the
                                        the old man’s bedroom.
         eye.
                                        2.The noise gets louder and louder
         1. He goes to the room
                                        until the narrator tells the cops to
         every night for a week,
                                        look under the floorboards.
         but the eye is closed

     Conflict: The narrator wants to
     kill the old man
                                             Resolution: The narrator
Exposition: The narrator offers a
                                             identifies the source of the
story as proof he is not insane. He
describes the situation with old man         “sound” as “the beating of [the
and his eye.                                 man’s] hideous heart.”
Climax: The turning point. The most
“A Very Short         intense moment (either mentally or in
Story”                action). The conflict is generally
“Dr. Chevalier’s      addressed here.
Lie”


        Rising Action: the
        series of conflicts           Falling Action: all of the
        and crisis in the             action that follows the Climax.
        story that lead to
        the climax.

    Conflict: Struggle between
    opposing forces                       Resolution: The conclusion; the
                                          tying together of all of the
Exposition: The start of the              threads.
story. The way things are before
the action starts.
Review:
Three Common Points of View
  Omniscient: The narrator knows everything, including what
   each character is thinking, feeling, and doing throughout the
   story.
  3rd Person Limited: The narrator knows only the thoughts
   and feelings of a single character, while other characters are
   presented only externally.
  1st Person: The narrator participates in action but sometimes
   has limited knowledge about both events outside of those in
   which he or she is directly involved and motivations that are
   not his or her own.
Point of View


 “The Tell Tale Heart”   What kind of narrator
  by Edgar Allan Poe      tells this story?
Point of View
 “The Tell Tale Heart”    1st person narrator
  by Edgar Allan Poe          Unreliable: he is trying to prove he is
                               sane, which he obviously is not! The
                               narrator admits that "he can hear all
                               things in the heaven and in the earth
                               [and] many things in hell"
                              He occasionally pretends to be an
                               omniscient narrator. When he says,
                               "Presently I heard a slight groan,
                               and I knew it was the groan of
                               mortal terror. […] I knew the sound
                               well. Many a night […] it has welled
                               up from my own bosom,” he is
                               telling us how the hold man feels
                               and what he thinks.
Point of View

 “A Very Short Story”       What kind of narrator tells
  by Ernest Hemingway
                             this story?
Point of View
 “A Very Short Story”
                          Omniscient or 3rd person limited narrator?
  by Ernest                 The narrator seems to be external, yet he
  Hemingway                  generally speaks from the point of view of the
                             man. Note that he neither names him nor
                             identifies him. Furthermore, the last sentences
                             are like the description of the scene that this
                             man sees.
                            But, the narrator doesn't obviously enter the
                             man’s mind, so he appears to be an
                             objective narrator in that he leaves the
                             interpretation of the actions of the characters to
                             the reader.
                            Yet, there are signs of anger in the text, which
                             suggests that the narrator is manipulating the
                             reader into seeing the story from his point of
                             view. This would conflict with the objective
                             narrator POV.
Point of View


 “Dr. Chevalier’s Lie”       What kind of narrator
  by Kate Chopin
                              tells this story?
Point of View
 “Dr. Chevalier’s Lie”    The (objective) omniscient
  by Kate Chopin            narrator
                              The story includes details about
                               both the doctor’s and the
                               townspeople’s behavior.
                              The neutral tone in the conclusion
                               shows that the narrator does not
                               editorialize about society’s
                               thoughts about the girl or
                               Chevalier’s lie.
In Groups, discuss POV. Prepare to read a paragraph or two
demonstrating each of the following perspectives:

1st person Wolf
1st person little Pig
1st person Mother Pig or another minor character

3rd person Wolf
3rd person little Pig
3rd person Mother Pig or another minor character

Omniscient Objective: Just tells facts
Omniscient Subjective: Enters the minds and shares feelings of
multiple characters
Lecture Subject
Character and Setting
Basic Elements of a Story

1.PLOT - the story line; a unified, progressive pattern of action or events
in a story
2.POINT OF VIEW (POV) - the position from which the story is told

3.CHARACTER - person portraying himself or another
in a narrative or drama
4.SETTING - the time and place of the action in a story
5.TONE - the attitude of the author toward his subject or toward the reader
6.MOOD - the feeling or state of mind that predominates in a story creating a
certain atmosphere
Types of Characters:
 Round Character: convincing, true to life; fully
  developed and described. Not all good or all bad.
 Dynamic Character: undergoes some type of
  change in story, generally after a conflict.
 Flat Character: stereotyped, shallow, often
  symbolic.
 Static Character: does not change in the course
  of the story.
Methods of Characterization

 By directly describing:

  Luz sat on the bed. She was cool and fresh in the
   hot night.


 Through the reaction of other characters.
  Luz stayed on night duty for three months. They
   were glad to let her.
 Through the character’s own words and
 actions:
  “The following day he wrote a letter. One,
   doubtless, to carry sorrow, but no shame to
   the cabin down there in the forest.
    It told that the girl had sickened and died. A
    lock of hair was sent and other trifles with it.
    Tender last words were even invented”
By detailing physical appearance, particularly
features that symbolize character.
   It was open --wide, wide open --and I grew
    furious as I gazed upon it. I saw it with
    perfect distinctness --all a dull blue, with a
    hideous veil over it that chilled the very
    marrow in my bones; but I could see nothing
    else of the old man's face or person: for I had
    directed the ray as if by instinct, precisely
    upon the damned spot.
 By sharing the characters own thoughts.
   Was it possible they heard not? Almighty God!
    --no, no! They heard! --they suspected! --they
    knew! --they were making a mockery of my
    horror!-this I thought, and this I think.
Setting: the time, place, and period in which the action
           occurs.




The Catcher in the    Lord of the Flies:     The Bean Trees:
Rye: New York,        deserted island, the   Arizona/Oklahoma
1940s                 future.                1980s.
Setting can help in the portrayal of character.

            “it was so quiet and lonesome out, even though it
            was Saturday night. I didn’t see hardly anybody on
            the street. Now and then you just saw a man and a
            girl crossing the street with their arms around
            each other’s waists and all, or a bunch of
            hoodlumy-looking guys and their dates, all of them
            laughing like hyenas at something you could bet
            wasn’t funny. New York’s terrible when somebody
            laughs on the street very late at night. You can
            hear it for miles. It makes you feel so lonesome
            and depressed” (Salinger 81).
                   The Catcher in the Rye
In some works of fiction, the action is so closely related to
 setting that the plot is directed by it.


“The new man stands, looking a minute, to get the
set-up of the day room. One side of the room
younger patients, known as Acutes because the
doctors figure them still sick enough to be fixed,
practice arm wrestling and card tricks…Across the
room from the Acutes are the culls of the Combine’s
product, the Chronics. Not in the hospital, these to
get fixed, but just to keep them from walking
around the street giving the product a bad name”
(Kesey 19).
       One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest
Setting can establish the atmosphere




                    “During the whole of a dull, dark,
                    and soundless day in the autumn of
                    the year, when the clouds hung
                    oppressively low in the heavens, I
                    had been passing alone, on
                    horseback, through a singularly
                    dreary tract of country” (Poe)
                    “The Fall of the House of Usher”
Guided Writing
Creative Writing Prompt
Write the following four words on your paper:
 Character
 Place
 Time
 Situation

 Now chose four numbers between 1 and10. Write one
  number next to each of the four words.
    You may chose any numbers that you want. They
     can be the same or different for each category.
Character
1. a new mother
2. a photographer
3. a recent high school graduate
4. a restaurant owner or manager
5. an alien from outer space
6. a homeless child
7. a 93-year-old woman
8. an environmentalist
9. a college student
10.a jazz musician
Setting: Place

1. near a National Forest
2. a wedding reception
3. a celebration party
4. an expensive restaurant
5. a shopping mall
6. a city park
7. the porch of an old farmhouse
8. a polluted stream
9. a college library
10.a concert hall
Setting: Time

1. during a forest fire
2. after a fight
3. the night of high school graduation
4. after a big meal
5. sometime in December
6. late at night
7. after a big thunderstorm has passed
8. in early spring
9. first week of the school year
10.during a concert
Situation/Challenge

1. an important decision needs to be made
2. a secret needs to be confessed to someone else
3. someone's pride has been injured
4. a death has occurred
5. someone has found or lost something
6. someone has accused someone else of doing
   something wrong
7. reminiscing on how things have changed
8. someone feels like giving up
9. something embarrassing has just happened
10.someone has just reached an important goal
Establish the basics
  Choose a POV                             Outline a basic Plot
 Omniscient: The narrator knows            Exposition: This will include
  everything, including what each            your setting: time and place
  character is thinking, feeling, and       Conflict: This will depend on
  doing throughout the story.                your situation or challenge
 3rd Person Limited: The narrator          Rising action: Events that
  knows only the thoughts and feelings       happen on the way to the
  of a single character, while other         climax
  characters are presented only             Climax: the most intense
  externally.
                                             moment in your story
 1st Person: The narrator participates     Falling action: What
  in action but sometimes has limited        happened after the climax
  knowledge about both events
                                            Resolution: The information
  outside of those in which he or she is
                                             with which you leave your
  directly involved and motivations that
                                             reader
  are not his or her own.
Homework
            Post #8: Guided Writing


            Reading: “The
             Celebrated Jumping
             Frog of Calaveras
             County”
            Study Terms: 1-8

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Ewrt 30 class 8

  • 2. AGENDA Terms 1-8 Review: POV and Plot Discussion: Fiction Lecture: Character and Setting
  • 3. 1. 1. Character Character 2. 2. Flat characters Flat characters 3. 3. Round characters Round characters 4. 4. Protagonist Protagonist 5. 5. Antagonist Antagonist 6. 6. Motivation Motivation 7. 7. Plot Plot 8. 8. Chronological Order Chronological Order Terms
  • 4. 1. Protagonist: The protagonist or hero 1. Protagonist: The protagonist or hero is the central character in the story is the central character in the story who engages our interest or who engages our interest or sympathy. Sometimes, the term sympathy. Sometimes, the term protagonist is preferable to hero, protagonist is preferable to hero, because the central character can be because the central character can be despicable as well as heroic. despicable as well as heroic. 2. Antagonist: the character or force 2. Antagonist: the character or force that opposes the antagonist. that opposes the antagonist.
  • 5. 3. Character: an imagined person in a literary work. 3. Character: an imagined person in a literary work. 4. Flat characters: are one-dimensional figures with 4. Flat characters: are one-dimensional figures with simple personalities. They show none of the simple personalities. They show none of the human depth, complexity, and contrariness of a human depth, complexity, and contrariness of a round character or of most real people. round character or of most real people. 5. Round characters are complex figures. A round 5. Round characters are complex figures. A round character is a full, complex, multidimensional character is a full, complex, multidimensional character whose personality reveals some of the character whose personality reveals some of the richness and contradictoriness we are richness and contradictoriness we are accustomed to observing in actual people, rather accustomed to observing in actual people, rather than the transparent obviousness of a flat than the transparent obviousness of a flat character. We may see a significant change take character. We may see a significant change take place in a round character during the story. place in a round character during the story.
  • 6. 7. Motivation is the external forces 7. Motivation is the external forces (setting, circumstances) and internal (setting, circumstances) and internal forces (personality, temperament, forces (personality, temperament, morality, intelligence) that compel a morality, intelligence) that compel a character to act as he or she does in a character to act as he or she does in a story. story. 8. Plot: the artistic arrangement of events 8. Plot: the artistic arrangement of events in a story. in a story. 9. Chronological Order: the story is told in 9. Chronological Order: the story is told in the order in which things happen. It the order in which things happen. It begins with what happens first, then begins with what happens first, then second, and so on, until the last incident second, and so on, until the last incident is related. is related.
  • 7. The Review Review: In your groups, Review: In your groups, discuss plot and POV. Consider discuss plot and POV. Consider the three stories from your the three stories from your reading reading Plot and POV “The Tell Tale Heart” “A Very Short Story” “Dr. Chevalier’s Lie”
  • 8. Climax: The turning point. The most Plot Line intense moment (either mentally or in action). The conflict is generally addressed here. Rising Action: the series of conflicts and crisis in the story that lead to Falling Action: all of the the climax. action that follows the Climax. Conflict: Struggle between opposing forces Resolution: The conclusion; the tying together of all of the Exposition: The start of the threads. story. The way things are before the action starts.
  • 9. The Tell Tale Climax: The narrator kills the old man, Heart cuts up the body, and hides it under the floor Rising Action: Falling Action: 2. The narrator makes 1.The police show up and he shows a noise and wakes the them the house. They settle in man up: he opens the the old man’s bedroom. eye. 2.The noise gets louder and louder 1. He goes to the room until the narrator tells the cops to every night for a week, look under the floorboards. but the eye is closed Conflict: The narrator wants to kill the old man Resolution: The narrator Exposition: The narrator offers a identifies the source of the story as proof he is not insane. He describes the situation with old man “sound” as “the beating of [the and his eye. man’s] hideous heart.”
  • 10. Climax: The turning point. The most “A Very Short intense moment (either mentally or in Story” action). The conflict is generally “Dr. Chevalier’s addressed here. Lie” Rising Action: the series of conflicts Falling Action: all of the and crisis in the action that follows the Climax. story that lead to the climax. Conflict: Struggle between opposing forces Resolution: The conclusion; the tying together of all of the Exposition: The start of the threads. story. The way things are before the action starts.
  • 11. Review: Three Common Points of View  Omniscient: The narrator knows everything, including what each character is thinking, feeling, and doing throughout the story.  3rd Person Limited: The narrator knows only the thoughts and feelings of a single character, while other characters are presented only externally.  1st Person: The narrator participates in action but sometimes has limited knowledge about both events outside of those in which he or she is directly involved and motivations that are not his or her own.
  • 12. Point of View  “The Tell Tale Heart” What kind of narrator by Edgar Allan Poe tells this story?
  • 13. Point of View  “The Tell Tale Heart”  1st person narrator by Edgar Allan Poe  Unreliable: he is trying to prove he is sane, which he obviously is not! The narrator admits that "he can hear all things in the heaven and in the earth [and] many things in hell"  He occasionally pretends to be an omniscient narrator. When he says, "Presently I heard a slight groan, and I knew it was the groan of mortal terror. […] I knew the sound well. Many a night […] it has welled up from my own bosom,” he is telling us how the hold man feels and what he thinks.
  • 14. Point of View  “A Very Short Story”  What kind of narrator tells by Ernest Hemingway this story?
  • 15. Point of View  “A Very Short Story”  Omniscient or 3rd person limited narrator? by Ernest  The narrator seems to be external, yet he Hemingway generally speaks from the point of view of the man. Note that he neither names him nor identifies him. Furthermore, the last sentences are like the description of the scene that this man sees.  But, the narrator doesn't obviously enter the man’s mind, so he appears to be an objective narrator in that he leaves the interpretation of the actions of the characters to the reader.  Yet, there are signs of anger in the text, which suggests that the narrator is manipulating the reader into seeing the story from his point of view. This would conflict with the objective narrator POV.
  • 16. Point of View  “Dr. Chevalier’s Lie”  What kind of narrator by Kate Chopin tells this story?
  • 17. Point of View  “Dr. Chevalier’s Lie”  The (objective) omniscient by Kate Chopin narrator  The story includes details about both the doctor’s and the townspeople’s behavior.  The neutral tone in the conclusion shows that the narrator does not editorialize about society’s thoughts about the girl or Chevalier’s lie.
  • 18. In Groups, discuss POV. Prepare to read a paragraph or two demonstrating each of the following perspectives: 1st person Wolf 1st person little Pig 1st person Mother Pig or another minor character 3rd person Wolf 3rd person little Pig 3rd person Mother Pig or another minor character Omniscient Objective: Just tells facts Omniscient Subjective: Enters the minds and shares feelings of multiple characters
  • 20. Basic Elements of a Story 1.PLOT - the story line; a unified, progressive pattern of action or events in a story 2.POINT OF VIEW (POV) - the position from which the story is told 3.CHARACTER - person portraying himself or another in a narrative or drama 4.SETTING - the time and place of the action in a story 5.TONE - the attitude of the author toward his subject or toward the reader 6.MOOD - the feeling or state of mind that predominates in a story creating a certain atmosphere
  • 21. Types of Characters:  Round Character: convincing, true to life; fully developed and described. Not all good or all bad.  Dynamic Character: undergoes some type of change in story, generally after a conflict.  Flat Character: stereotyped, shallow, often symbolic.  Static Character: does not change in the course of the story.
  • 22. Methods of Characterization  By directly describing:  Luz sat on the bed. She was cool and fresh in the hot night.  Through the reaction of other characters.  Luz stayed on night duty for three months. They were glad to let her.
  • 23.  Through the character’s own words and actions:  “The following day he wrote a letter. One, doubtless, to carry sorrow, but no shame to the cabin down there in the forest. It told that the girl had sickened and died. A lock of hair was sent and other trifles with it. Tender last words were even invented”
  • 24. By detailing physical appearance, particularly features that symbolize character.  It was open --wide, wide open --and I grew furious as I gazed upon it. I saw it with perfect distinctness --all a dull blue, with a hideous veil over it that chilled the very marrow in my bones; but I could see nothing else of the old man's face or person: for I had directed the ray as if by instinct, precisely upon the damned spot.
  • 25.  By sharing the characters own thoughts.  Was it possible they heard not? Almighty God! --no, no! They heard! --they suspected! --they knew! --they were making a mockery of my horror!-this I thought, and this I think.
  • 26. Setting: the time, place, and period in which the action occurs. The Catcher in the Lord of the Flies: The Bean Trees: Rye: New York, deserted island, the Arizona/Oklahoma 1940s future. 1980s.
  • 27. Setting can help in the portrayal of character. “it was so quiet and lonesome out, even though it was Saturday night. I didn’t see hardly anybody on the street. Now and then you just saw a man and a girl crossing the street with their arms around each other’s waists and all, or a bunch of hoodlumy-looking guys and their dates, all of them laughing like hyenas at something you could bet wasn’t funny. New York’s terrible when somebody laughs on the street very late at night. You can hear it for miles. It makes you feel so lonesome and depressed” (Salinger 81). The Catcher in the Rye
  • 28. In some works of fiction, the action is so closely related to setting that the plot is directed by it. “The new man stands, looking a minute, to get the set-up of the day room. One side of the room younger patients, known as Acutes because the doctors figure them still sick enough to be fixed, practice arm wrestling and card tricks…Across the room from the Acutes are the culls of the Combine’s product, the Chronics. Not in the hospital, these to get fixed, but just to keep them from walking around the street giving the product a bad name” (Kesey 19). One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest
  • 29. Setting can establish the atmosphere “During the whole of a dull, dark, and soundless day in the autumn of the year, when the clouds hung oppressively low in the heavens, I had been passing alone, on horseback, through a singularly dreary tract of country” (Poe) “The Fall of the House of Usher”
  • 31. Creative Writing Prompt Write the following four words on your paper:  Character  Place  Time  Situation  Now chose four numbers between 1 and10. Write one number next to each of the four words.  You may chose any numbers that you want. They can be the same or different for each category.
  • 32. Character 1. a new mother 2. a photographer 3. a recent high school graduate 4. a restaurant owner or manager 5. an alien from outer space 6. a homeless child 7. a 93-year-old woman 8. an environmentalist 9. a college student 10.a jazz musician
  • 33. Setting: Place 1. near a National Forest 2. a wedding reception 3. a celebration party 4. an expensive restaurant 5. a shopping mall 6. a city park 7. the porch of an old farmhouse 8. a polluted stream 9. a college library 10.a concert hall
  • 34. Setting: Time 1. during a forest fire 2. after a fight 3. the night of high school graduation 4. after a big meal 5. sometime in December 6. late at night 7. after a big thunderstorm has passed 8. in early spring 9. first week of the school year 10.during a concert
  • 35. Situation/Challenge 1. an important decision needs to be made 2. a secret needs to be confessed to someone else 3. someone's pride has been injured 4. a death has occurred 5. someone has found or lost something 6. someone has accused someone else of doing something wrong 7. reminiscing on how things have changed 8. someone feels like giving up 9. something embarrassing has just happened 10.someone has just reached an important goal
  • 36. Establish the basics Choose a POV Outline a basic Plot  Omniscient: The narrator knows  Exposition: This will include everything, including what each your setting: time and place character is thinking, feeling, and  Conflict: This will depend on doing throughout the story. your situation or challenge  3rd Person Limited: The narrator  Rising action: Events that knows only the thoughts and feelings happen on the way to the of a single character, while other climax characters are presented only  Climax: the most intense externally. moment in your story  1st Person: The narrator participates  Falling action: What in action but sometimes has limited happened after the climax knowledge about both events  Resolution: The information outside of those in which he or she is with which you leave your directly involved and motivations that reader are not his or her own.
  • 37. Homework  Post #8: Guided Writing  Reading: “The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County”  Study Terms: 1-8

Notes de l'éditeur

  1. We are going to talk about three points of view today; there are, of course, others. The Omniscient narrator knows all, including the thoughts, feelings, and actions of every character in the story. This is much different from the 3 rd person limited narrator, who only knows the thoughts and feelings of a single character. He or she sees other characters and reports on their behavior but not their motivations or feelings. The first person narrator tells his or her story, but he or she often has limited knowledge about events other than those which directly affect him or her.
  2. So far we have talked about Plot, Setting, Tone, Mood, and Character. Today, we will look at POV-the position from which the story is told. Why You ask? Because the POV helps us to understand the author’s intentions. It also influences the method and timing of revealing details to the reader.