Narrator and Voice Pages 148-149. Omniscient Point of View: The ____-_____Storyteller 1.When the omniscient point of view is used, the narrator is not.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
It is the voice of the story.
Advertisements

Point of View English 10 Unit #2 3 October Omniscient POV: “Know it All” Point of view—the vantage point from which a narrator tells a story Omniscient.
“The Necklace” – pg 220 All of us, at one time or another, have felt that the grass is greener on the other side of the fence – in other words, that someone.
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close The Book Thief
 Unit 2.  Narrator – who tells the story o Controls everything we know about the characters and events  Point of View – vantage point from which the.
Grade 7 The Power of Point of View
By Adil Al Bedri. Kinds of Literary Writing 1. Narrative Writing 2. Descriptive Writing 3. Perscriptive Writing 4. Expository Writing.
Theme the author’s comment of life Point of View who is telling the story, the narrator Based on this photo- What is his comment on life?
Elements of the Short Story Literature and Composition I.
POV Point of View.
Summer’s Trade Page 261.
Point of View: A Collaboration by Glenwood Middle School Teachers.
Jeopardy Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy Source:
Literary Elements Mrs. Leyland English Setting Characterization Plot Conflict Climax Resolution Theme Point of view Figurative Language.
LITERARY TERMS Know them, use them, LOVE them!. Fiction A narrative in which situations and characters are invented by the writer.
Narrator and Voice English II – Chapter 3.
Definition: The perspective from which the story is told.
Elements of Fiction & Nonfiction. Character: a person (or animal, robot, alien, etc.) who is responsible for the thoughts and actions within a story,
Elements of Fiction.
NARRATION AND VOICE. Narration  Omniscient point of view: the narrator is not a character and is able to tell us everything about every character. 
Point of View: Describes the relationship of the narrator to the story. In other words, who is seeing and telling the story.
Narrative Text Once upon a time…. Narrative Text Writing that Tells a Story Contains… – Plot – Character – Setting – Point of View – Theme Structure –
Point of View The perspective from which a story is told.
Featuring the Three Little Pigs and the Big Bad Wolf.
Point of View in A Short Story
English I McPhee. English I 9/4/2014 Complete Bellringer Get HW out: “TMDG” Comprehension Q’s Prepare for quiz.
(for narratives). SETTING: Where and when the story takes place THEME The insight about human life that is revealed in a literary work.
Types of Narrator. Narrator – In fiction, the one who tells the story. Narrators differ in their degree of participation in the story.
Collection 3: Truth and Consequences. Point of View There are three main points of view used in stories: First Person (I, Me, We) Second Person (You)
Narrator and Voice Who’s Talking?.
Point of View and the Narrator Mr. Adkins. The Author and Audience Why is the narrator’s point of view important? – Helps audience analyze the author’s.
Meaning What is the work about? What is its theme? What effect or impression does the reader have ? What is the argument or summary of the work? What.
Short Stories a literary prose piece, usually a narrative, which focuses sharply on one character or event; generally readable in a single sitting.
Novels/Short Stories. NOVEL A long fictional story, whose length is normally somewhere between one hundred and five hundred pages Uses the elements of.
When you read a story, the narrator—the person telling the story—controls everything you know about the characters and events. The Narrator.
PERSPECTIVE Also known as “Point of View”. KEY IDEAS  Definition  First-Person Perspective  Second-Person Perspective  Third-Person Perspective.
(Assessing how point of view or purpose shapes a text)
Point of view Let us make some Cornell Notes from this presentation and the video presentation: you will need to make notes with headings for first person,
FICTION NOTES Fiction: A story that is made up by the author or not true.
» In the objective point of view, the writer tells what happens without stating more than can be inferred from the story's action and dialogue. » The.
Who’s telling the story?.  A narrator is, within any story (literary work, movie, play, verbal account, etc.), the entity that tells the story to the.
Literary Analysis Workshop Unit Two Point of View: Key Term The perspective from which a story is told is called point of view. The voice that tells.
 The narrator “holds the camera.”  The narrator tells the story.  A writer’s choice of narrator is called point of view.
NARRATOR and VOICE The narrator controls everything readers know about the characters and themes of a story. Notes from pages of Elements of Literature.
FICTION NOTES Fiction: A story that is made up by the author or not true.
Context Clues & Point of View. Context Context Context –The words and phrases surrounding a word –Can help a reader understand an unknown word.
Point of View Shadow O. Annie G.. “point of view: the vantage point from which the author presents action of the story. Who is telling the story? An all-knowing.
“The Interlopers” Tone & Voice Practice.
Narrator and Voice Who’s Talking?.
Point of View Vantage point from which a writer narrates, or tells, a story. Omniscient Third-Person Limited First Person.
Point of View.
Point of view POV.
Types of POV.
NJASK Test Prep Ms. Zicha
Point of View: A Collaboration by Glenwood Middle School Teachers
Literary Analysis: Point of View
Point of View Notes.
NARRATION AND POINT OF VIEW
Writing a story .
Elements of Fiction And drama
English I Literary Terms: Set Three
How To Make Your Point of View
English 2413 Lecture 3 Narration and Point of View
Literary Terms English 1.
Point of View.
Unit One Literary Terms.
Point of View in a Short Story
Point of View Review 1.
It is the voice of the story.
Narrator and Voice Who’s Talking?.
Presentation transcript:

Narrator and Voice Pages

Omniscient Point of View: The ____-_____Storyteller 1.When the omniscient point of view is used, the narrator is not _________ and almost never ____________________. 2.Omniscient means “____-____” and the omniscient narrator is able to tell us everything about __________________.

The First-Person Point of View: “_________” as the Storyteller 3. Unlike the all-knowing omniscient narrator, the first-person narrator is a _________________ using _____, the first-person pronoun. 4. Literary critics use the word ________ to refer to the first-person narrator.

5.We get a ___________ view of ___________ from a first-person narrator, but we only know___________, ______________, and _________________. 6.An unreliable narrator is ___________and does not ______________.

Third person limited: Focus on ________character 7. In third-person-limited point of view, the storyteller zooms in on ______ but talks about ________ in third person, using _______ or ________. 8. With this point of view, we share ___________ to everything that happens in the story, but what we know about other characters is __________________.

Tone: Watch that ______! 9. Tone is the _______ a speaker or writer takes toward ________, __________ or ___________. 10. Some descriptions of tone could be: ________, ______, ________, ________, ________, ______, or _______. 11. If you change a story’s point of view, you may ________ the _________ as well.

Voice: One-of-a-kind ________ 12. Tone is one aspect of the ________ that characterizes a piece of writing. 13. Voice refers to ________ __and _________________. 14. Sometimes writers purposely ______ voices, or their voice may ______________, but usually a writer’s voice _________ from work to work.

15. In fiction, a writer’s voice can be created by _________, ___________, or ___________. 16. The narrator’s voice can affect our: ______________ and shape ____________________.