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 Ling 131: Language & Style
 

 Topic 8 - Discourse structure and point of view > Discourse structure and point of view > Task C > Our answer

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Session Overview
Discourse structure and point of view
Discourse structure of 1st and 3rd person novels
Being the author!
Different kinds of point of view
Linguistic indicators of point of view
Ideological viewpoint
Point of view in a more extended example
Point of view checksheet
Topic 8 'tool' summary
 
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Readings

Discourse structure and point of view

Our answer for task C

Addresser 1
(Roger McGough)

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Message

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Addressee 1
(Reader)

Addresser 2
(Male Lover)

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Message

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Addressee 2 (previous discourse)
(Himself)

As with a dramatic text, here McGough presents us with two characters. In this case, though, as we noted when we examined the poem in detail, the male lover does not speak, but appears to be thinking. So even though he appears to be thinking those thoughts 'towards' the young woman in a 'direct address' style, he is not really communicating with her, but thinking to himself. Nonetheless, because we know she is present in the scene, we take her viewpoint into account, rather like overhearers in plays, even though she is never actually represented as speaking or thinking in the poem. So, for example, we can sympathise with her unhappiness as the man imagines her running home at the end of the poem and imagine her reaction if she could hear what he is thinking about her.

 

 

 

 

 


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