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 Ling 131: Language & Style
 

Topic 8 - Discourse structure and point of view > Discourse structure of 1st and 3rd person novels > Task A > 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
 
Useful Links
Readings

Discourse structure of 1st and 3rd person novels

Our answer to task A

Addresser 1
(Charlotte Bronte)

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Message

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Addressee 1
(Reader)

Addresser 2
(Jayne Eyre: narrator)

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Message

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Addressee 2
(Narratee: Reader)

Addresser 3
(Jayne Eyre: character)

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Message

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Addressee 1
(Mr Rochester)

Note that effectively levels 2 and 3 on the left-hand side of the diagram 'collapse together' when Jane speaks, as she is both the narrator and the character. In other words, the viewpoint for the two levels will often (but not always) be the same. The narrator looking back may have a different viewpoint from the younger Jane-the -character, but often their views and attitudes will be the same. On the right-hand side of the diagram, levels 1 and 2 collapse together. There is no reified narratee (no actual person sitting listening to her as she tells her story) and so the reader will take up the narratee role as he or she reads the novel. This will make us feel closer and more involved with Jane the narrator as we read. The particular discourse architecture of this novel thus affects how we understand it and respond to the viewpoints being presented. Other novels will have different discourse architectures and so engineer different viewpoint relations. For instance As I Lay Dying, by William Faulkner has 13 different I-narrators, all of whom are presented telling their version of the story of the death of Addie Bundren, one after another.

 


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