"If I forgot you, Oh, Earth ..." is an example of how authors use third parties, a limited omniscience to increase the emotional impact of stories It is a viewpoint.
The first point we consider is the narrator in the story, the relationship between character and reader. The pronoun I, you, or he and she can be used to identify the first person, the second person, the third person, respectively. "If I forgot you, Earth ..." the narrator is an outsider, not personality. The narrator uses the pronoun "he" to quote the hero's Marvin. This will be the third person perspective
Omniscience refers to the ability of a narrator to read and convey the thoughts and emotions of people. The narrator is perfectly aware, knowing all thought and feelings of the character, knowing that there are only 1 to 2 characters in the operation, or completely objective without revealing the concept of the character You can become. By choosing to restrict his omnipotence view to Marvin's idea of just 10 years, Arthur C. Clark leads his readers - the eyes of Marvin - their eyes about the danger of nuclear war through the eyes of children I forced to broaden my understanding. The state of the narrator changes slightly from a childlike miracle to a calm condition that reveals the end of the world's end of history.
Katherine Donges is a suburb of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, where he teaches infants at a residential treatment center in York, Pennsylvania. He earned a master's degree in creative literature and art at the University of Wilkes, a master's degree in art and a master's degree in fine arts It is. From Capella University, I wrote a female novel and a young adult novel.
"I forgot you, O earth" is a short story of science fiction written by British writer Arthur Clark, first published in the future SF magazine in 1951. It was subsequently published as part of the short story collection of "Expedition Earth" (1953). Psalm 137: 5 - "Jerusalem if you forget" - The writers mourn the destruction of Jerusalem by Babylonian troops. The theme of the story uses the uneasiness that was common in the then nuclear war.
"If I forgot you, Earth ..." was published in 1951. At that time, literary critics with most mainstream thought that science fiction had no literary value. From the late nineteenth century to the early twentieth century, British writers such as H. G. Wells and Jules Verne wrote a science fiction acclaimed, but this view still exists. Nonetheless, readers of Science Fiction still like the "short story of my favorite writer" that he often reads in science fiction such as Future. released. Indeed, many science fiction pulp magazines have helped science fiction become a negative image of critics, even if cheap magazines fascinated popular readers. When the story was collected in Clark's "Adventure of the Earth" in 1953, it did not attract much attention.
"If I forgot you, Oh Earth" is a short story by Arthur C. Clark. This story is divided into two parts: fairness and teaching. At the beginning of the story, a place and background explanation will be given, but the reader will not be told explicitly. When the father began talking, the teaching part began, and the author explain everything clearly to Marvin and the reader.