Reader And The Narrator essay topics

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  • Little Black Dog To The Opera
    350 words
    "Fortun'e"The short story, "Fortun'e" by Rikki Ducornet, written as a horatian satire, utilizes first person narrative by allowing the narrator to refer to himself in the first sentence, "My passion for Egypt was sparked at the opera". By referencing to himself in this way, I learn two things: first he has a love for Egypt; and second he has been to the opera. Two sentences later, interestingly enough, I discover that the author has adopted a persona to create irony, and that persona is a dog, ....
  • Point The Narrator And The Reader
    1,772 words
    The Point of Point of View Point of view is an essential element to consider when reading literature of any kind. How an author chooses to tell a story, directly affects how and what the reader sees and feels. Most authors write their stories with a certain point of view in order to keep the reader interested and to help them better understand the characters and their situations. In Truman Capotes, "My Side of the Matter", and John Cheevers, "Five-Forty-Eight", these reasons are the basis for th...
  • Advantages And Objections To His Proposal
    1,300 words
    An Ironic Proposal Unlike most essays, Jonathan Swift's "A Modest Proposal" is written for the reader to see through what the narrator is expressing. The narrator does not want the reader to agree that the solution to overpopulation and poverty in Ireland is to eat babies, he wants the reader to see there needs to be a practical solution. By stating the advantages and objections to his proposal, using ironic words and phrases, he directs the reader not to see the apparent, but the implicit. Swif...
  • Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas
    1,137 words
    The Ones Who Stay At Omelas Utopia is any state, condition, or place of ideal perfection. In Ursula Le Guin's short story 'The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas' the city of Omelas is described as a utopia. 'The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas' presents a challenge of conscience for anyone who chooses to live in Omelas. Omelas is described by the narrator as the story begins. The city appears to be very likable. At times the narrator does not know the truth and therefore guesses what could be, prese...
  • Barn On Fire And Sarty
    1,016 words
    Points of View in The Cask of Amontillado and Barn Burning Montresor, the narrator and main character in Edgar Allan Poe's The Cask of Amontillado, tells the story using the first-person point of view. Consistent in voice, Montresor uses a sadistic and manipulative tone that creates dramatic irony. He is an unreliable narrator because his story tries to justify his crime. Barn Burning, by William Faulkner, is narrated from a third-person point of view by a limited-omniscient narrator. The action...
  • Narrator And Tyler
    1,706 words
    The Audience Is Everything The times in which we live are geared toward the entertainment industry. If one is going to input something into society; make a speech, write a book, release a movie, a lot of thought must be put into whether or not it will gain approval from its audience. It is the job of many people to investigate what people want to see and hear, what they will like and what will bomb. The difference in the split ending of the movie Fight Club versus the book Fight Club exists beca...
  • Lockwood's Character Affect The Novel
    1,002 words
    Wuthering heights According to the dictionary 'narrative' means 'A narrated account; telling a story'. A 'narrative' is used in Emily Bronte's critically acclaimed novel 'Wuthering Heights'. From the outset we learn of our narrator, Lockwood. Lockwood is an urban, middle class gentleman, the stereotypical male of the time. We receive narrative from him alone for the first three chapters of the novel. This essay will investigate into the effectiveness of the narrative technique employed by Emily ...
  • Use Of Short And Long Chapters
    1,190 words
    Heinrich B"old uses his novel, The Lost Honour of Katharina Blum, to attack modern journalistic ethics as well as the values of contemporary Germany. The structure of this novel is important to conveying his message. He uses a police report format, differences in chapter lengths, narrator or author intervention, a subtitle, and the extensive use of the 'puddle' metaphor. All these things contribute towards the message in the text. The puddle metaphor is the most significant device used in the st...
  • Particularly Interesting Story
    404 words
    The Open Boat is a particularly interesting story because of the great detail that author extends and because of the solitary reflections of the characters in consideration of their demise. The story possesses amazingly vivid description. This attention to detail affords the reader the greatest degree of reading pleasure. Crane paints such glorious images in reader's mind with his eloquence. 'The morning appeared finally, in its splendor, with a sky of pure blue, and the sunlight flamed on the t...
  • Mansfield's Readers
    3,037 words
    Katherine Mansfield's Short Stories The introduction of the short story to literature created a whole new field for writers and readers to experiment with and enjoy. Katherine Mansfield was born and raised in New Zealand and then moved to England where she spent a great deal of her life. Mansfield is known as one of the most remarkable writers to come out of New Zealand and England. Katherine Mansfield's "specialization" is the short story. Mansfield wrote many short stories in her lifetime and ...
  • Kundera's Narrative Technique
    939 words
    Insight into Milan Kundera's narrative This essay is specifically based on the narrative technique used by Milan Kundera in his book The Unbearable Lightness of Being. It is mostly focused in a personal critic supported with comments and critics made by important and distinguished authors. To sum up, it is an essay which main point is directed to the description of Milan Kundera's narration as well as a personal opinion supported by critics of experts. The Unbearable Lightness of Being is a work...
  • Maya Angelou Displays Imagery Through Descriptive Language
    734 words
    Imagery In The Poem Our Grandmothers by Maya Angelou Image (Imagery) Descriptive poetry flourished. One basic meaning for image is provided by that context, but other, looser and more treacherous, meanings have accreted: any sensuous effect provoked by literary language; any striking language; metaphor; symbol; any figure. Maya Angelou's poem, Our Grandmother's, vividly exemplifies a sense of imagery that is brought to life. The most effective way that, Maya Angelou presents imagery to the reade...
  • Marlow's Negative Views On Colonialism And Racism
    842 words
    Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness relates to the reader through several narration al voices, the story of the Englishman Marlow traveling physically up an unnamed river in the wilderness of the Belgium Congo, and psychologically as a journey into one's self. The frame narrator is an Englishman upon the Nellie, a yawl on the river Thames, who relates the story as told to him by the separate narrator Marlow. Through the frame narrator, Conrad expresses to the reader the theme of the shifting natur...
  • Tension Suspense And Atmosphere To The Story
    2,491 words
    How do the writers of "the Cone", The Red Room" and "The Man with the Twisted Lip, create atmosphere, tension and suspense? In this piece of course work I will be looking at how the writers of three short stories create atmosphere, tension and suspense, through the choice of setting, the role of the narrator, how the other characters are used, how the stories are structured, the use of language, your own response to the stories. I will be looking at "The Cone" and "The Red Room" by H. G Wells, a...
  • Sonny Deals With His Emotions
    1,363 words
    Coming of Age In the short story, "Sonny's Blues", Baldwin carefully crafts multiple elements of the story in order to support the master theme of suffering. The focus of the story is placed on the suffering of human lives and how one deals with the daily repercussions that are bestowed upon us. Baldwin meticulously arranges several motifs that can be traced throughout the story. Among the most notable of these are the premises of music and childhood. The significance of these symbols is display...
  • Repetition Of The Primer Foreshadows The Evil
    659 words
    In The Bluest Eye, author Toni Morrison uses various creative writing styles in order to accentuate the dark moods that the book is based upon. Improper grammar, font styles, repetition, and narrator switching are all used in place of long descriptive paragraphs to convey the moods associated with topics such as abuse and incest. The first creative writing style presented to the reader is a manipulation of the words themselves. In the first chapter, the "Dick and Jane" primer, Morrison starts by...
  • Narrator's Love For The Person
    1,107 words
    A well-written poem normally will utilize some or all of six elements of literature to express an idea thoroughly. A few elements include plot, setting, and diction, each of which provides for an effective piece of literature. William Shakespeare wrote several sonnets that carefully use the elements of literature. His famous work, "That Time of Year", includes examples of setting, tone, and imagery to strengthen the reader's understanding of the sonnet. Shakespeare's use of setting is very effec...
  • Narrator In A Modest Proposal
    601 words
    A Modest Proposal Jonathan Swift's A Modest Proposal is a story full of satire and irony focusing on England's economic oppression and nonchalant attitude over Ireland during the early 1700's. His use of irony was his way to reach the people of England in hopes that they would offer a more feasible social plan that would benefit both the economies of Ireland and England, and more importantly, the people themselves. The Narrator in A Modest Proposal begins by first walking the reader down the str...
  • Sutpen Through The Narration Of Mr Compson
    2,343 words
    Absalom Absalom A Narrative Perscective Essay, Research Absalom Absalom A Narrative Perscective Metropolitan State College of Denver Absalom, Absalom! ; An Innovative Narrative Technique Eng. 413. Major Authors: William Faulkner Shawn Montano Friday, December 06,199 Guilt should be viewed through the eyes of more than one person, southern or otherwise. William Faulkner filters the story, Absalom, Absalom! , through several minds providing the reader with a dilution of its representation. Miss Ro...
  • Narrator In Bartleby
    1,796 words
    Far naz Fal safi 9/15/1999 Most everyone remembers a favorite story that he or she has read. A book that just captivated the reader from beginning to end. But how do authors successfully grab the attention of their readers? Authors utilize specific techniques to convey the characters, setting, and plot effectively. The two short stories Bartleby, the Scrivener by Herman Melville and The Tenant by Bharati Mukherjee do just that. The authors of both stories effectively develop unique characters th...

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