Skip to main content

Impacts of Point of View in Fiction

 

Impacts of Point of View in Fiction

 

In the previous article titled Point of View in Fiction: Nature and Typeswe have seen that point of view is essentially a method of presentation. It is the particular voice (or narrator, speaker, teller or persona) selected by the author through which he conveys his story, defines a problem, or describes a state of mind. In writing a story, an author can choose one or more of the first-person, the second-person, or the third person to suit his intentions.

Thus, to the readers, point of view is the perspective through which they see the action, observe the characters, view the setting, hear the dialogues and even learn what a character thinks and feels by seeing inside his or her mind (if the author employs the omniscient viewpoint). Different points of view naturally impact the information sent. If you listen to five different persons who saw an accident, you will get five different versions of report, depending on where each of them was at the time the accident occurred. Thus, the author’s choice of viewpoint will impact the readers’ understanding of the story and determines how close they feel to what’s happening in the story.

This article discusses the impacts of point of view on the reading of fiction in general and short story in particular. The discussion is divided into three sub-sections.

1. Viewpoint affects readers’ understanding of the story’s theme.

Point of view illuminates the theme of a story as it is the major method an author can use to accentuate his theme’s universality or particularity. A third-person, especially the omniscient viewpoint, is generally used to emphasize that the theme of the story is universal, i.e. it exists worldwide or affects people in a particular group, if not all over the world. A first-person viewpoint is generally employed to accentuate the particularity of the theme, i.e., it essentially affects a group of people though it might not exist in other groups. A second-person viewpoint usually highlights the closeness of the idea to the reader.

Chopin's The Story of an Hour expresses the idea of the importance of personal freedom in a marriage. It reveals the idea that an enslaved wife prefers to have her husband dead in order to have an independent life. Using the limited omniscient point of view, Chopin means to accentuate that unhappy wives living unhappily because they are enslaved in their marriage exist anywhere in the world. To get freedom, when they are given an opportunity, they will choose to live free of their husband’s domination.

O' Henry's The Last Leaf concerns with the idea that a true masterpiece can have various faces. Some masterpieces are measured by the money it earns or the fame it produces. Yet, according to O’ Hendry, the ability to save one’s life will also make a work a masterpiece. In the story, Behrman, who has waited long to create a masterpiece, dies after painting a leaf during a cold and wild night to let Johnsy regain his motivation to live. The story is told by an objective third-person narrator. By providing information, actions, and speeches objectively, O’ Hendry tries to accentuate that a work that help one regain his motivation to live is universally a masterpiece.

Hemingway's Old Man at the Bridge expresses the theme that war victimizes people’s life and their beloved family. The story is told using the first-person narrator to accentuate that the idea should be viewed through the war correspondent’s perspective. If the war is perceived by a politician or a general, the result will be very different. It might be focused on the idea of how to win the war at any cost.

Egan’s  Black Box, reveals the theme that American society and the whole world’s security are threatened by terrorism particularly in the post-”9·11” period. By employing the second-person narrative in the story, Egan leads the readers to participate in the story and allows them to sense the same feelings, concerns, and worries as the protagonist does. By doing so, Egan manages to highlight the closeness of the theme to the readers. This certainly helps the readers understand the ideas.

 

2. Viewpoint affects readers’ objectivity in considering the story.

In general, the third-viewpoint, especially the omniscient point of view, allows the narrator to tell his story with great freedom.  He can move from one setting to another or from one event to another to give the reader a detailed, fully developed, three-dimensional picture in motion. He can also produce any useful bit of information without having to explain how he got it. He can even provide editorials to make his point clear. All of these allow the readers to view matters objectively.

Unlike the omniscient viewpoint, the first-person narrator conveys everything through his personal eyes and this makes the story more immediate and actual. Consequently, the reader will get a sense of immediate involvement in the action and feel close to the protagonist in the story.

Chopin's The Story of an Hour the limited omniscient point of view. This enables the narrator to provide a vivid characterization of the wife. But that characterization and the way she lives sound not very close not to mention intimate to the reader. Therefore, the reader tends to consider the matter objectively.

On the other hand, Boccaro’s A Long walk Home employs the first-person narrator. It is told by Jackson, one of the characters who narrates his own experience. This lets the readers  personally get involved with the events so that they perceive the matter subjectively. It also causes Jackson’s bitter experience that makes him wiser feel natural and close to the reader.

 

3. Viewpoint affects the life-likeness of a story to the readers.

Since the first-person narrator use makes the story more immediate and actual (as he conveys everything through his personal eyes) the reader will feel the story more life-like. It is different from a story told by an omniscient narrator, in which everything is conveyed impersonally or objectively. The use of the omniscient narrator emerges a ‘distance’ between the narrator and other characters. And this, in turn, creates a sense of detachment between the readers and the story.

The use of the first-person narrator in Hemingway’s Old Man at the Bridge enables the readers to share the old man’s misery. The readers would easily empathize with him. On the other hand, the use of the limited omniscient point of view in Chopin’s The Story of an Hour makes the events and characters detached from the reader.

Comments

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  2. My first point of view is that this article is very useful for writers 👍

    And my second point is that if you decided to divorce and you don't want to spend a lot of money on an attorney, turn to https://onlinedivorcetexas.com/filing-for-divorce-in-Harris-county service if you, like me, live in Texas state.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Just admiring your work and wondering how you managed this blog so well. It’s so remarkable that I can't afford to not go through this valuable information whenever I surf the internet! https://www.ytviews.co.in/buy-youtube-watch-hours/

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Types and Functions of Plot

Type of Plots  The plot used in fictions can be differentiated into four types: linear, episodic, parallel, and flashback. The most common plot employed in short stories is the linear plot. Some short stories, though quite rarely, also use flashback plot. The episodic and parallel plots, however, are found only in long fiction, i.e. novels. Short storied do not use episodic and parallel plots because short stories normally concentrate on a single event with a very limited number of characters, while episodic and parallel plots include a series of events or more than one plot. The following section describes each plot briefly. The Linear Plot The linear plot (sometimes is also called dramatic or progressive plot) presents action or occurrences chronologically. It typically starts with an exposition (or introduction to the setting and characters) and the conflict. After that, the rising action follows which leads to a climax. Soon after the climax, falling action emerges which brings

Identifying a Research Problem (and Writing the Statement of the Problem)

  Research is essentially a problem-driven process. It starts and focuses on a specific problem or phenomenon. During the research process, data is collected and theories are elaborated to explain the problem. In other words, identifying and determining the problem to study is the first and the most important aspect to deal with in undertaking research. Thus, the research problem is the foundation of a research project. If the foundation is shaky the entire project is doomed to failure. Despite its critical importance, identifying and stating a research problem are the most challenging aspects of undertaking research, especially for novice researchers. This might be due to an insufficient understanding of how to identify and write for a study. This article describes research problem identification as the first step of a research process. It starts by describing what a research problem is, how to identify it, and where to obtain it. Then it briefly probes the criteria for determining a

An Analysis of the Theme of Hemingway’s “Old Man at the Bridge”

  An Analysis of the Theme of Hemingway’s “Old Man at the Bridge” Introduction The theme is one of the most interesting elements of fiction, including a short story. It refers to the central idea or meaning that the author wants to convey to the readers. Some stories convey a single theme, but some other stories have several themes. Since short stories are related to human life, Alternbend and Lewis (1966, p. 78) define theme as “The general vision of life or the more explicit proposition about human experience that literature conveys”. In relation to this, one of the easiest ways to determine the theme of a short story is by asking ourselves, “What does the story say about life? The theme of fiction is generally presented through the other elements of fiction, particularly the plot and characterization. This article is a venture to analyze the theme of Hemingway’s Old Man at the Bridge . This story is interesting to analyze due to two reasons. First, it is based on Hemingway’s exp