Why You Can't Speak: Second-Person Narration, Voice, and a New Model for Understanding Narrative
[2023-07-31 22:20:32]
Description: style resolution style, style and poetry, including discourse analysis, literary and non-literary genres, stories, images, indicators, rhetorical analysis, style education research and theory. Contributions may come from fields such as literary criticism, critique theory, computational linguistics, cognitive linguistics, language philosophy, rhetoric, and literary research. In addition, Style also publishes reviews, reviews - articles, questionnaires, interviews, translations, enumerations, annotated bibliographies, as well as reports on meetings, websites, and software.
"Mobile Wall" represents the period between the latest issue available in JSTOR and the latest journal. The moving wall is usually expressed in terms of age. In rare cases, since the issuer selected the "zero" mobile wall, the current problem will be made public on JSTOR as soon as it is issued.
For example, if the current year is 2008 and the journal has a 5 year moving frame, you can get the 2002 article.
• Short story: This is a prose novel, a creative and poetic work. If you are the hero, please use a third person or first person (as if you are a narrator). If the first person 's voice is your choice, your short story can be read like a story, but it is not necessarily what happened to you. You can do it based on what you have experienced, but you say it as a general story. Your choice is unlimited; you can write whatever exists in reality, or you can form your own world for a short story.
The narrator is a narrator. Narrators can be categorized into three categories: first person narrator, second person narrator, and third person narrator. The narrator of the first person is "I" who speaks from the place of my topic. This narrator is usually a character that interacts with other characters in the story; we are seeing their interactions through the eyes of the narrator, and we know nothing that the talker does not know Absent. Second person narrator speaks at "you". - After reading Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "Yellow wallpaper", I began to think that the talker would not suffer from hysteria. I reached this idea by comparing my hysterical research with the symptoms of her story. In this article, I will explain why I think that the narrator is suffering from postpartum depression although I am not bothered by hysteria. "Yellow wallpaper" was written at the end of the 19th century
"Voice" of talking and talking. Some stories are written in first person viewpoint. There, the voice of the narrator is the voice of the viewpoint. For example, in The Huckvent of Huck Finn, the voice of a narrator is the voice of Huck Finn, the hero. Obviously, the historical writer Mark Twain tells a story with a fictitious voice as a speaker - full grammar, spontaneous speech and young inaccuracy. In other stories that are told in the perspective of a third party, scholars use the term narrator to express the voice of the author. For example, Oliver Twist of Charles Dickens proposed a story that the storyteller stood outside the stated behavior. He is not a character that interacts with other characters on the plot. It is attractive to equate such narrator's words and feelings with the opinions of historical authors.