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- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Path: sparky!uunet!charon.amdahl.com!pacbell.com!decwrl!sdd.hp.com!spool.mu.edu!agate!rsoft!mindlink!a710
- From: Crawford_Kilian@mindlink.bc.ca (Crawford Kilian)
- Subject: Fiction Advice 10: Persona
- Organization: MIND LINK! - British Columbia, Canada
- Date: Fri, 6 Nov 1992 04:26:43 GMT
- Message-ID: <17180@mindlink.bc.ca>
- Sender: news@deep.rsoft.bc.ca (Usenet)
- Lines: 138
-
- Narrative Voice
-
- Someone in your story has to tell us that Jeff pulled out his gun, that
- Samantha smiled at the tall stranger, that daylight was breaking over the
- valley. That someone is the narrator or "author's persona."
-
- The author's persona of a fictional narrative can help or hinder the success
- of the story. Which persona you adopt depends on what kind of story you are
- trying to tell, and what kind of emotional atmosphere works best for the
- story.
-
- The persona develops from the personality and attitude of the narrator, which
- are expressed by the narrator's choice of words and incidents. These in turn
- depend on the point of view of the story.
-
- First-person point of view is usually subjective: we learn the narrator's
- thoughts, feelings, and reactions to events. In first-person objective,
- however, the narrator tells us only what people said and did, without
- comment.
-
- Other first-person modes include:
-
- *the observer-narrator, outside the main story (examples: Mr. Lockwood in
- Wuthering Heights, Nick Carraway in The Great Gatsby)
-
- *detached autobiography (narrator looking back on long-past events)
-
- *multiple narrators (first-person accounts by several characters)
-
- *interior monologue (narrator recounts the story as a memory; stream of
- consciousness is an extreme form of this narrative)
-
- *dramatic monologue (narrator tells story out loud without major
- interruption)
-
- *letters or diary (narrator writes down events as they happen)
-
- If the point of view is first-person, questions about the persona are simple:
- the character narrating the story has a particular personality and attitude,
- which is plausibly expressed by the way he or she describes events.
-
- The second-person mode is rare: You knocked on the door. You went inside.
- Very few writers feel the need for it, and still fewer use it effectively.
-
- If the point of view is third-person limited, persona again depends on the
- single character through whose eyes we witness the story. You may go inside
- the character's mind and tell us how that character thinks and feels, or you
- may describe outside events in terms the character would use. Readers like
- this point of view because they know whom to "invest" in or identify with.
-
- In third-person objective, we have no entry to anyone's thoughts or feelings.
- The author simply describes, without emotion or editorializing, what the
- characters say and do. The author's persona here is almost non-existent.
- Readers may be unsure whose fate they should care about, but it can be very
- powerful precisely because it invites the reader to supply the emotion that
- the persona does not. This is the persona of Icelandic sagas, which inspired
- not only Ernest Hemingway but a whole generation of "hard-boiled" writers.
-
- If the point of view is third-person omniscient, however, the author's
- persona can develop in any of several directions.
-
- 1. "Episodically limited." Whoever is the point of view for a particular
- scene determines the persona. An archbishop sees and describes events from
- his particular point of view, while a pickpocket does so quite differently.
- So the narrator, in a scene from the archbishop's point of view, has a
- persona quite different from that of the pickpocket: a different vocabulary,
- a different set of values, a different set of priorities. (As a general rule,
- point of view should not change during a scene. So if an archbishop is the
- point of view in a scene involving him and a pickpocket, we shouldn't
- suddenly switch to the pickpocket's point of view until we've resolved the
- scene and moved on to another scene.)
-
- 2. "Occasional interruptor." The author intervenes from time to time to
- supply necessary information, but otherwise stays in the background. The
- dialogue, thoughts and behavior of the characters supply all other
- information the reader needs.
-
- 3. "Editorial commentator." The author's persona has a distinct attitude
- toward the story's characters and events, and frequently comments on them.
- The editorial commentator may be a character in the story, often with a name,
- but is usually at some distance from the main events; in some cases, we may
- even have an editorial commentator reporting the narrative of someone else
- about events involving still other people. The editorial commentator is not
- always reliable; he or she may lie to us, or misunderstand the true
- significance of events.
-
- Third-person omniscient gives you the most freedom to develop the story, and
- it works especially well in stories with complex plots or large settings
- where we must use multiple viewpoints to tell the story. It can, however,
- cause the reader to feel uncertain about whom to identify with in the story.
- If you are going to skip from one point of view to another, start doing so
- early in the story, before the reader has fully identified with the original
- point of view.
-
- The author's persona can influence the reader's reaction by helping the
- reader to feel close to or distant from the characters. Three major hazards
- arise from careless use of the persona:
-
- 1. Sentimentality. The author's editorial rhetoric tries to evoke an
- emotional response that the story's events cannot evoke by
- themselves--something like a cheerleader trying to win applause for a team
- that doesn't deserve it. A particular problem for the "editorial
- commentator."
-
- 2. Mannerism. The author's persona seems more important than the story
- itself, and the author keeps reminding us of his or her presence through
- stylistic flamboyance, quirks of diction, or outright editorializing about
- the characters and events of the story. Also a problem for the editorial
- commentator. However, if the point of view is first person, and the narrator
- is a person given to stylistic flamboyance, quirks of diction, and so on,
- then the problem disappears; the persona is simply that of a rather
- egotistical individual who likes to show off.
-
- 3. Frigidity. The persona's excessive objectivity trivializes the events of
- the story, suggesting that the characters' problems need not be taken
- seriously: a particular hazard for "hardboiled" fiction in the objective
- mode, whether first person or third person.
-
- Verb tense can also affect the narrative style of the story. Most stories use
- the past tense: *I knocked on the door. She pulled out her gun.* This is
- usually quite adequate although flashbacks can cause awkwardness: *I had
- knocked on the door. She had pulled out her gun.* A little of that goes a
- long way.
-
- Be careful to stay consistently in one verb tense unless your narrator is a
- person who might switch tenses: *So I went to see my probation officer, and
- she tells me I can't hang out with my old buddies no more.*
-
- Some writers achieve a kind of immediacy through use of the present tense: *I
- knock on the door. She pulls out her gun.* We don't feel anyone knows the
- outcome of events because they are occurring as we read, in "real time." Some
- writers also enjoy the present tense because it seems "arty" or experimental.
- But most readers of genre fiction don't enjoy the present tense, so editors
- are often reluctant to let their authors use it. I learned that the hard way
- by using present tense in my first novel, The Empire of Time; it was enough
- to keep the manuscript in editorial limbo for months, and the final offer to
- publish was contingent on changing to past tense. Guess how long I agonized
- over *that* artistic decision!
-