T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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973.1 | This is a problem? | ATSE::WAJENBERG | | Mon Apr 22 1991 10:23 | 26 |
| I run across 3rd-person multiple-viewpoint a fair bit in mystery as
well as in science fiction. These are my main forms of fiction
reading, but I can also recall it in "mainstream" stuff, too.
Seems to me that it is simply one more narrative method, certainly not
merely the refuge of the hack. It works for:
Homer, in the Illiad
Kipling, in "Kim"
Conan Doyle, in the Serlock Holmes mysteries
Baum, in the Oz stories
Tolkien, in "Lord of the Rings"
Lewis, in the Narnia Chronicles
Tony Hillerman, in his Navajo mysteries
Jane Langton, in her New England mysteries
Elizabeth Peters, in her Jaqueline Kirby mysteries
Brin, in "Startide Rising" and "The Uplift War"
etc., etc.
In fact, the marrative method seems so common that I am surprised
writing guides urge writers away from it. Or is it perhaps deemed a
bit tricky for *beginning* writers? I'll allow that you have to have a
decent mix or alternation of viewpoints, to keep the change from
looking anomalous.
Earl Wajenberg
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973.2 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Mon Apr 22 1991 10:39 | 5 |
| Isn't third person almost inherently multiple-viewpoint?
How else does one pursue a plot line that does not exclusively involve
at least one single character?
- tom]
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973.3 | Third Person Singular | ATSE::WAJENBERG | | Mon Apr 22 1991 14:50 | 15 |
| Re .2
But there are lots of perfectly good plots with only one viewpoint
character, even in 3rd-person. I could rattle of a 3rd-person/single
list of novels as easily as I rattled off 3rd-person/multiple in .1.
You usually use 3rd-person/single when you want to tell "X's story"
but don't want to have X tell it.
So, for instance, P. C. Hodgell's "Godstalk" follows the heroine Jame,
and only Jame (excepting a few paragraphs). It is Jame's story.
3rd-person/multiple is an intermediate step between 3rd-person/single
and "omniscient narrator."
Earl Wajenberg
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973.4 | | FDCV14::CONNELLY | arduum cursum angelorum perficere | Mon Apr 22 1991 21:45 | 29 |
| re: .1
I guess maybe i should have said 3rd-person "many"-viewpoints, where "many"
is more than somewhere around four. There's some excuse for it when one
is trying to tell a panoramic or multi-generational story, where it is
simply impossible to present the relevant story action through a couple of
characters' eyes. But i tend to associate a lot of the use of it in
science fiction and fantasy now with bad habits picked up from writers like
Stephen King (who can be excellent but who also gets sloppy in books like
_It_ because his editors are probably afraid to red pencil a mega-best
selling author).
The trick in multiple viewpoint is in not switching so often that the
narrative gets totally confused or unfocused, as well as making each
viewpoint character real enough to involve the reader. Frank Herbert was
able to break most of the rules in his early Dune books, but i think it
caught up with him as the series went on. Horror fiction is probably
the worst in terms of introducing viewpoint characters who get bumped
off gorily in the same chapter. Fantasy seems to have a problem with
viewpoint characters who appear for a chapter or two to flesh out the
setting and cultural background of the invented world (especially early
on in a book...this was one of the annoying points of the last Guy Gavriel
Kay book i read).
A good question to ask would be: does the author NEED this many viewpoint
characters or would the story work just as well minus one, two or more?
In DeLint's book, i'll bet about half of the viewpoint characters could
have been eliminated.
paul
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973.5 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Tue Apr 23 1991 10:22 | 23 |
| > <<< Note 973.3 by ATSE::WAJENBERG >>>
>
> 3rd-person/multiple is an intermediate step between 3rd-person/single
> and "omniscient narrator."
Perhaps this is what's confusing me.
- A third-person story is narrated by someone outside the story.
- A third-person single viewpoint story requires the central character
to be always present, or the narrator has to take over, sans viewpoint.
- A third-person multiple viewpoint story can recount plot from the point
of view of any handy character, or impartially by the narrator, again
without a predisposed viewpoint.
So when does a narrator become "omniscient"? When he adopts a viewpoint?
Stephen King is probably a good example of an omniscient narrator,
in that he tips his hand about what is to happen and presents
a more-than-usual accounting of individual motivation and rationale.
I happen to be in the middle of "Tommyknockers" as we speak, and this
affected omniscience is apparent (but it works for the story - I guess
horror is like that).
- tom]
|
973.6 | | ATSE::WAJENBERG | | Tue Apr 23 1991 10:58 | 40 |
| I don't know that literature professors have created precise definitions of
these narrative forms, but personally, I'd say:
- Third-person/single is narrated relating ONLY events that (sole) viewpoint
character experiences.
- Third-person/multiple is narrated relating ONLY events that (various)
viewpoint characters experience.
- Omniscient narrator is narrated relating events beyond what viewpoint
characters experience.
Authors can successfully mix forms within a story or a part of a story. And,
as always, the borders of the definitions are not exact. For instance,
"Are the batteries included?" Oscar asked naively.
"Naively" is a narrative comment on Oscar, and so suggests a move to the
omniscient mode. But if the whole story or passage narrates only the
adventures of Oscar, I'd be inclined to classify it as 3rd-person/single.
Rising a little from this level of detail, I'd say that any narrative mode can
be used well, and any can be abused. The main goal is to give the reader
sufficient orientation OR the *right* *kind* of DISorientation.
So, for instance, in first-person narrative, the narrator's own viewpoint is a
good, firm basis for orientation. But, exactly because we are limited to the
narrator's narrow range experiences, we run the risk of sharing in the
narrator's confusion when events in the story become hectic or enigmatic. As
long as the author conveys to us a delightfully lucid or amusing description
of "this is what it is like to be confused," we are still content to go on
reading. But if the author slips from clear description of confusion to
confused description, reading becomes a chore.
With first-person or third-person/single narrative, confusion can result from
the restrictions of viewpoint; we can't get the big picture. With
third-person/multiple (or /numerous), confusion can result from trying to keep
track of the viewpoints, as was said a couple of notes back.
Earl Wajenberg
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973.7 | all knowing, all seeing | SUBWAY::MAXSON | Repeal Gravity | Tue Apr 23 1991 17:13 | 25 |
| The attribute of omniscence (a.k.a. "all-knowing author") was, I
thought, that the narrator has the option to portray the thought-stream
of a character, to wit:
"Gimmie that gun," Wilbur barked, his hand trembling subtly. He could
feel the sweat bead in the small of his back, and his pulse rolled like
distant thunder in his ears.
These are details that would not be available to an objective observer,
but allow an insight into the thought processes of a character. It also
creates a possibility for extended rapport or empathy between reader
and character.
The second issue under debate is wether, having done this with one
character, can you then successfully shift viewpoint to another
character and be all knowing?
Successful examples:
"Lord of the Rings," JRR Tolkein
Sure.
- M
|
973.8 | very successful shifts of speaker... | LEZAH::BOBBITT | so wired I could broadcast... | Thu Apr 25 1991 10:14 | 10 |
| There'\s a shift from speaker to speaker amongst the protagonists of
Guy Gavriel Kay's "Fionavar Tapestry Series", however the view is not
omniscient. In fact, when you're in one character's mind, you don't
even see EVERYTHING, you get glimpses, concepts, thoughts, words, but
not everything. You must pull together the motivations and actions
yourself (and think about what might happen next). It's a great
exercise in thinking!
-Jody
|
973.9 | | SELECT::RIVERS | A mortal among Titans | Thu Apr 25 1991 17:06 | 21 |
| I was under the impression that a purely omniscient viewpoint was
something out of gothic era literature. The example that comes to mind
is something like this:
Roger looked at the rain drenched sign. In faded letters, it warned
trespassers away at penalty of their life. Roger, soaked to the bone
and hungry, moved towards the abandoned castle, resolving to face
whatever dangers lie ahead of him.
Forgive him, dear Reader, he knows not what he does, for Roger is a
mortal, such as you and I....blah blah blah.
Multiple viewpoint works best in a story that has a lot of characters
doing things that move the story along, but not *too* many characters.
Too many viewpoints fragments things, and jars the reader out of the
storyline.
FWIW
kim
|
973.10 | modern fiction | SUBWAY::MAXSON | Repeal Gravity | Fri Apr 26 1991 02:42 | 14 |
| I don't think so... Most of the contemporary stuff I read uses
all-knowing author - try Mary Gaitskill's "Bad Behavior" or any
of Tom Clancy's stuff. Steven King.
The style I miss is first person singular. Two points for identifying
______
this:
"I went down to the railway station. I went over to the taxi stand.
I've been standing in the lobby of the Hyatt Hotel..."
-M
|
973.11 | "Little did any of them know..." | ATSE::WAJENBERG | | Fri Apr 26 1991 10:32 | 41 |
| Re .10
There's still plenty of first person singular out there. Roger Zelazny
favors it strongly. The quote sounds a bit like Hemmingway, but I sure
wouldn't bet money on it.
Re .9
Omniscient narrator doesn't have to jump clear out of the book and
address the reader directly. It's sufficient to describe things
unknown to any character.
"Luke pulled the trigger, unaware of the risk he was taking in
using a wet phaser."
"The planet Vleeb orbits a red dwarf sun. It was warm enough to
support life, but as a corollary, it huddled so close to its tiny
star that tidal action had stopped its rotation; one side lay in
permanent day, the other in everlasting night." (We then go on
to relate a tale of iron-age warlords of Day and Dusk on Vleeb,
none of whom think even once about these gravitational niceties.)
The line between omniscient narrative and third-person/N-viewpoint
narrative is fuzzy. An author can mix in varying amounts of
omniscience while still spending most or a lot of text inside
characters' viewpoints.
Or the author can make a formal separation between narrative styles
within the work. Consider "Hitchiker's Guide to the Galaxy," where we
spend most of our time following the experiences of the Arthur and
other characters, but take frequent dips into the Guide itself, which
narrates about the characters (not to mention Life, the Universe, and
Everything) with terrifying objectivity and omniscience. Just to bend
things a little more, the characters occasionally read the Guide that
is (perhaps in a later edition?) commenting on them.
Isaac Asimov's frequent epigraphs from the Encyclopedia Galactica, or
Frank Herbert's from the works of Princess Irulan, have the same
narrative structure, though completely different dramatic tones.
Earl Wajenberg
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973.12 | That's a good start--now publish! | TLE::MINAR::BISHOP | | Fri Apr 26 1991 13:15 | 7 |
| re .11
Please write the Vleeb story! I like non-magical iron-age warring
states stories, and I like your setting (I'll assume most life is
in the twilight zone...).
-John Bishop
|
973.13 | Then again, maybe I've lost track of the topic... | SELECT::RIVERS | A mortal among Titans | Mon Apr 29 1991 11:13 | 21 |
| re. 11
>>Re .9
>>Omniscient narrator doesn't have to jump clear out of the book and
>>address the reader directly. It's sufficient to describe things
>>unknown to any character.
No, they dont' have to, but it was common in that day and age. Also, I
would suspect that this style would be considered a "pure" omniscient
viewpoint, where the author talks about anything and everything as if
they were talking right to the reader.
>> "Luke pulled the trigger, unaware of the risk he was taking in
>> using a wet phaser."
I think this example is a borderline case of bad writing (or bad use of the
narrative), and a little *too* omniscient.
kim
|
973.14 | | ATSE::WAJENBERG | | Mon Apr 29 1991 14:30 | 15 |
| Re .13
Luke and his wet phaser may not be stylistically great, but the use of
omniscient narration isn't any different from, say, a part of "Lord of
the Rings" where Sam, talking to himself, thinks of his far-off friends
and says something like, "But they are all far away and probably never
think of us," and waves his hand back the way he had just come. Tolkien
then remarks that Sam was actually gesturing south, not west, and gives a
quick run-down of what all the other members of the party are doing
(which always includes thinking of Sam and Frodo). It's perfectly
omniscient, but I found it quite successful. In fact, Tolkien often
"pans back" to tell you how the current main characters (often the
erstwhile viewpoint characters) would look to a remote observer.
Earl Wajenberg
|
973.15 | Tolkien | FDCV14::CONNELLY | ylerab...tset rorrim eht dessap I | Tue Apr 30 1991 00:57 | 12 |
|
In _The Lord of the Rings_, Tolkien actually has a pretty small set of
viewpoint characters--basically the four hobbits and possibly Gimli and
Aragorn in a few places. As the series progresses, more and more of the
narrative shifts away from the viewpoint characters and into a more
"omniscient" mode--part of the reason why i thought _The Fellowship of
the Ring_ was the best of the three books. The _Silmarillion_ is almost
all "omniscient"--you rarely get inside the head of a particular viewpoint
character. It's handled well, but still not as sympathetic as _The Hobbit_
or _The Fellowship of the Ring_ for the average reader (i.e., me).
paul
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973.16 | De gustibus non est disputandum. | ATSE::WAJENBERG | | Tue Apr 30 1991 11:52 | 11 |
| Re .15
There comes a point when lit-crit gets down to personal preference.
Myself, I don't have a strong preference for a particular narrative
mode. If viewpoint-character mode gives lots of involvement and
"sympathy," omniscient mode gives lots of orientation and "lucidity."
I have often enjoyed the feeling of widened perspective when an author
moves from the first to the second, or the feeling of zooming in for a
close-up when the author moves from the second to the first.
Earl Wajenberg
|
973.17 | | LABRYS::CONNELLY | Can I get there by candlelight? | Tue May 14 1991 00:44 | 17 |
|
Talk in the J. G. Ballard note reminds me that Ballard uses almost exclusively
a third person single-viewpoint mode. George Stewart's _Earth Abides_, another
classic, also uses this mode. I'm not sure what the advantage of third person
single-viewpoint is over first person (since in both you're getting just one
character's perspective), but it seems to work well in _Earth Abides_, _The
Drowning World_ and _The Crystal World_ (the latter two being Ballard novels).
Another less "literary" use of third person single-viewpoint technique is in
_The World of Null-A_ by A. E. Van Vogt.
I still tend to think that third person multiple-viewpoint is an extremely
tricky technique to master. If i look at my list of ten favorite SF books,
only _Dune_ manages this successfully (_Lord of Light_ verges more into the
"omniscient" technique when it departs from Sam's perspective, as for Tak,
Yama, Ratri, Kubera, etc.).
paul
|
973.18 | | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Of course, I'm just a cricket... | Mon Jul 01 1991 01:57 | 32 |
| The loveliest uses of multiple-viewpoint in SF that I've read lately
are M. J. Engh's "Arslan" and "Wheel of the Winds". But Sturgeon (due
partially to strategic improvements from Faulkner) has to be the
original master, right?
>> I'm not sure what the advantage of third person
>> single-viewpoint is over first person (since in both you're getting just one
>> character's perspective)...
Two come immediately to mind:
- There can be a constant nagging (and distracting) question with
first-person as to whether the fiction is supposed to be an
autobiographical narrative of some kind, and, if so, what the framing
device is supposed to be.
- In first-person, the narrative voice belongs to a character, and thus
its honesty is in doubt. Third-person limited allows the writer to
filter sensations through the hero's mind (thus providing
story-advancement and characterization at once) while still allowing
the illusion that the reader is a camera roaming over reality.
Third-person limited is particularly important to writers who wish to
emphasize the gaps between consciousness and reality -- Flaubert
and Joyce, Ballard and Delany for example. In "Dhalgren", it's of the
utmost importance that the reader see the Kid as an unreliable source
AND that the reader experience what the Kid is going through; in
"Triton", the satire largely depends on the reader noticing that what
Bron is making of Bron's experience differs painfully from what the
reader might make of Bron's experience.
Ray
|