"Narrator" Essays and Research Papers

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    Virginia Woolf vs. Orhan Pamuk Aykut Can TÜRKMEN Petroleum – Gas University of Ploieşti Abstract: The aim of this paper is to compare and indicate the affect of “stream of consciousness”. Moreover‚ I tried to show the (dis)similarities between these two important writers. In this paper‚ for Orhan Pamuk‚ I focused on the novel which is called “Sessiz Ev (Silent House)”. Key words: stream of consciousness‚ omniscient point of view‚ third person narration‚ impact

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    Reading the City

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    Literature Research Essay: Reading the City. Cities are places which enable the realisation of the self‚ or conversely cities separate the self from creativity and imagination in spaces of alienation and estrangement’ (Gary Bridge and Sophie Watson). Discuss the city as a site of self-enhancement and/or ‘alienation and estrangement’ in the texts on the unit. Our surroundings manipulate the way we react and interact with both others and ourselves. We are like putty waiting to be moulded by the

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    lawyer in melancholy. The Successful lawyer is the narrator in the text; he is a first person narrator who uses the pronoun "I" a lot. Indeed‚ the narrator is both intradiegtic and homodiegetic which means that the narrator takes part in the story and is a character in the story respectively. The narrator narrates the story from his own perspective and he describes himself‚ the other characters and the events but actually he

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    the author’s beliefs. Firstly‚ Characters The main participants in the story are: the author and John Baxter Copmanhurst (the skeleton). The author in the story is the narrator presented with the subject pronoun “I”; he is the one who describes and comments a singular dream he had. At the beginning of the story‚ the narrator is surprised‚ horrified and pitying when he is brought face to face with a skeleton but at the end he is interested and filled with sympathy for the dead and gives his promise

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    First of all‚ the author enables the reader to identify with the narrator by using the literary technique of a first-person narration. This form often includes an interior monologue. Especially this extract of Tillie Olsen’s “I stand here ironing” is partly an interior monologue. The first-person narrator‚ a mum of five children‚ thinks about someone’s offer of help for her oldest daughter. This means the reader gets to know her thoughts and is able to share her feelings‚ perceptions and reflections

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    Why I Live At The P.o.

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    us that her entire family has " turned against" her. Much of the story is presented in a dialogue that shows her family picking on her‚ ?So the postmistress fails to understand why don?t I cut off my beard? (1028). This does not suggest that the narrator perception is always on the mark. She is probably kidding herself when she says at the beginning of the story that everything was going well until Stella- Rondo arrived.

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    The Hurt Man “The Hurt Man “is a short story written by Wendell Berry taking place in the late 1880s. The childhood memories of the man Mat Feltner are described from a third person narrator whose omniscience is limited to Mat. The fact that the narrator is able to give away information regarding much later events such as “she would begin to matter to him a great deal in a dozen of years‚ and after that she would matter to him all his life “of course referring to Margaret; Mat’s coming wife

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    March 15‚ 2012 More Than the Eyes Can See “Cathedral” begins with the narrator introducing his wife’s friend‚ Robert‚ who is coming to the narrators’ house to spend the night. He had recently lost his wife and the narrators’ wife had invited him to visit her after years of separation. She had met Robert when she landed a job to read to a blind man and they kept in touch through tapes‚ even after she left the job. The narrator was not looking forward to meeting Robert because his idea of a blind man

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    Just Like That

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    are out shooting kangaroos. The purpose is transforming the boy into a man. The story takes place in Australia. Language: The language is easy to read and understand. There are some direct speech but mostly it’s storytelling. Narrator: It’s a third omniscient narrator from the boy’s point of view. We know how he feels and what he thinks about the events that are happening. Themes: Growing up. Pressure: the man pressures the boy. Characters: The boy is on his first kangaroo hunt‚ I believe

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    Describe how crisis is shown in one poem The significance of crisis‚ and often more interestingly‚ the reaction of crisis is fundamental in many poems written by Auden. Crisis is depicted in O What Is That Sound as a major event‚ with panic and the unknown reaching a climax in the last stanzas. The structure of the poem is chronological‚ with the reader experiencing the events with the characters. The inevitable of the soldiers coming is known from the beginning of the poem by the one of the characters;

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