Voices and Points of View
- Created by: Isabelle
- Created on: 08-04-14 14:39
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- Voices and Points of View
- Tennyson
- Godiva
- 'Not only we, the latest seed of Time.../ Cry down the past, not only we that prate/ Of rights and wrongs, have loved the people,/And loathed to see them overtax'd'
- Addresses reader directly, sets up contrast betw/Godiva + society
- Exceptional character, does more than most
- Used to persuade readers to fight for their beliefs
- Perhaps suffragette movement - present during his time period
- Used to persuade readers to fight for their beliefs
- Epilogue = own PoV, inspired personally
- 'Not only we, the latest seed of Time.../ Cry down the past, not only we that prate/ Of rights and wrongs, have loved the people,/And loathed to see them overtax'd'
- The Lotos Eaters and the Choric Song
- 'A land where all things seem'd the same.../And our great deeds, as half forgotten things'
- PoV = unreliable due to Lotos Flower effects
- Dulled senses, discourages passivity
- Repetition of 'seem' suggests perspective = warped
- 'half - forgotten' easily let old life slip away, ridiculous as such heroic characters
- 'Then some one said, 'We will return no more;' / And all at once they sang, 'Our island home/ Is far beyond the wave;we will no longer roam'
- Direct speech used to demonstrate change in emotions + strength/conviction
- 'some one said' no blame, passivity is result of own actions
- Through choric song, mariners may be trying to convince themselves?
- 'A land where all things seem'd the same.../And our great deeds, as half forgotten things'
- Tithonus
- 'Let me go: take back thy gift' 'Happy men that have the poer to die.../Release me'
- Dramatic monalogue
- Desperation, begging = sympathy
- But is to blame, naivety
- Declarative statement
- T stresses consequences of 'over-reaching', straying from natural course for selfish reasons
- 'Why should a man desire in any way/ To vary from the kindly race of men...?'
- Rhetorical Q, must know limitations
- Taking into account other works, not suggesting passivity, but to not seek to change things for selfish reasons
- 'Let me go: take back thy gift' 'Happy men that have the poer to die.../Release me'
- Godiva
- Frost
- 'Out,Out-'
- 'And they, since they / Were not the one ded; turned to their affairs.'
- Blunt, unfeeling, perhaps reflect poets own PoV regarding how in society, people only care for themselves
- Individualism?
- Blunt, unfeeling, perhaps reflect poets own PoV regarding how in society, people only care for themselves
- 'Call it a day, I wish they might have said'
- Retrospective narrator, builds sense of foreboding, foreshadowing
- The reader is wary, they know something terrible is about to occur
- Retrospective narrator, builds sense of foreboding, foreshadowing
- 'And they, since they / Were not the one ded; turned to their affairs.'
- A Considerable Speck
- 'Plainly with an intelligence I dealt.'
- Narration tainted w/narcissism? Only accepts his view as correct
- Persuades + manipulates reader into agreeing w/his Pov
- 'I have a mind myslef and recognize/ Mind when I meet with it any guise.../ On any sheet the least display of mind'
- Ambiguous PoV, comments
- Perhpas suggests any display of intelligence is pleasing - those who try to write
- Or could be sarcasm/ cynicism - comment on poets/authors who fail to write
- Or study in consciousness, either way PoV is open to the readers' interpretation
- 'Plainly with an intelligence I dealt.'
- 'Out,Out-'
- The Great Gatsby
- Nick Carraway
- Unreliable narrator?
- Insightful, ultimately he successfully portrays the differences between the classes and negative consequences for the 'over-reachers'
- Retrospective narrator
- Gives hints, foreshadowing Gatsby's death
- 'it is what preyed on Gatsby, what foul dust floated in the wake of his dreams'
- Gives hints, foreshadowing Gatsby's death
- 'I'm inclined to reserve all judgements'
- 'I am one of the few honest people that I have ever known'
- Likeable? Change readers PoV regarding Gatsby, do we not like him because Nick likes him? Or do we like him because Nick is influencing our PoV
- Unreliable narrator?
- Nick Carraway
- Enduring Love
- Joe
- Scientific, logical, analytical
- 'comforting geometry' 'reassuring clarity' 'mathematical grace' pg2-3
- Joe is ultimately proved right, does this mean McEwan argues that scientific etc is the best PoV?
- Unreliable narrator?
- Guilt - retrospect- what is purpose of writing book?
- 'I didn't know, nor have I ever discovered, who let go first. I'm not prepared to accept that it was me' pg14
- Perceives himself to be unemotional
- Guilt - retrospect- what is purpose of writing book?
- Scientific, logical, analytical
- Jed
- Religious view, extremely faithful
- Attack by McEwan on religion?
- 'faith is joy' pg245
- 'his faith should have such reach, into the shallows of his answering machine, into the angles of his prose' pg47
- Religious view, extremely faithful
- Clarissa
- Artistic, romantic way of seeing things
- 'Her conviction that love did not find expression in a letter was not perfect' pg7
- Artistic, romantic way of seeing things
- Jean
- Signifies key theme of misundertandings
- 'But who's going to forgive me? The only person who can is dead.' pg230
- She shows a lack of faith, unlike other characters
- Signifies key theme of misundertandings
- Joe
- Tennyson
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