The narrator played an important role throughout the entire story. The narrator appears to be a modern Chinese intellectual relaying the life story of Ah Q. Sometimes the narrator is talking about Ah Q, while at others he is telling us what is happening. At still other times, he would go directly into Ah Q’s mind and tell us what Ah Q is thinking. Lu Xun successfully uses the role of the narrator and Ah Q to create a narrative of Chinese characteristics in several ways as summarized below.
First, the narrator often reveals Ah Q’s inner thoughts and thus exposes his negative characteristics. In the chapter titled “Barred from the revolution”, there are internal descriptions of Ah Q’s thoughts when he wanted to become a revolutionary but the Imitation Foreign Devil would not let him. Before wanting to be a revolutionary, Ah Q found himself being “ignored” by people. Therefore he was to get “into touch with the revolutionary party” and “talk things over with the Imitation Foreign Devil” (103).