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Published byAlan Dennis Modified over 9 years ago
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Character in The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time
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Christopher The book gives us an insight into Christopher’s emotionally simple world, challenging our ordinary perspectives of character and personality. Christopher’s unusual perspective on life is partly as a result of Asperger’s Syndrome and partly just an expression of his unique personality as a human being. The next slides consider different aspects of his character
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Emotional Detachment He is unable to ‘read’ people’s emotions: p19: p101: He doesn’t like being touched: p9: He feels no desire to express affection for other people: p233
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Information Overload Christopher is proud of his powers of observation and memory p96: p174: He can not cope with too much information, or too many questions, at once: p8: pp208 – 209:
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The need for order Order and regularity is very important to Christopher, because of the information overload p32: p174: He has developed habits because of this need for order and regularity pp106-107: He always needs to know the time p1: p17:
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Science and Mathematics His love for order explains his passion for maths, which is logical and not ambiguous. He calms himself by doing maths problems p 149: p 201: He also uses maths to explain the world to himself p 15:
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Relationship with language Hates English and metaphors: P19: p22: Likes literal observations and ‘truth’: p4: p10:
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Christopher’s Ritualistic Personality Colours pp105 – 106 Cars p31 Rocking p4: P258: Mathematical formulas pp126-127 Food touching p62
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Christopher as a Detective Solving a mystery requires at least three processes: gathering information, sifting out what is important and making connections. Christopher is good at the first of these, but not the second: pp179 – 181: or third: p32: p63:
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Christopher as a Writer In Christopher, Haddon has constructed a character who seems unsophisticated. Most of his sentences are short and factual: p1: Sometimes he writes longer sentences where a string of phrases is joined by conjunctions: p19: These passages use language effectively to imitate the overwhelming rush of information that causes Christopher distress
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Christopher as narrator Christopher is a fallible, first person narrator. We see other characters only through his eyes Because he cannot understand emotions, the reader has to interpret the actions of other characters, as observed by Christopher, to understand how they are feeling. To discuss: Is Haddon’s creation of Christopher as a narrator successful?
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