Understanding Characters in Objectively Narrated Stories
Characterization is the way writers develop characters and reveal those characters’ traits to readers. (Kirszner 121) Most times in a story we learn about the characters, through their own thoughts or through the narrative of a third person. In fact, most stories written are told through a first or third person narrative. What about the less popular point of view, the objective narrative? In the objective narrative there is no storyteller to clue the reader in about that aching old bullet wound. There’s not a mechanism to share the premonitions of doom felt in back of an army captain’s mind.
Objective narration does not provide emotions, thoughts or motivations aside from the words or actions of the characters. While it may be argued that other points of view may “fill out” a story, objective narratives draw in a reader. One cannot read an objective narrative without having to think, conclude and fill in the blanks......
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Approximate Pages: 9 (260 words per double-spaced page) |