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Point of View
An automobile accident occurs. Two drivers are involved. Witnesses include four sidewalk spectators, a policeman, a man with a video camera who happened to be shooting the scene, and the pilot of a helicopter that was flying overhead. Here we have nine different points of view and, most likely, nine different descriptions of the accident.
In short fiction, who tells the story and how it is told are critical issues for an author to decide. The tone and feel of the story, and even its meaning, can change radically depending on who is telling the story.
Remember, someone is always between the reader and the action of the story. That someone is telling the story from his or her own point of view. This angle of vision, the point of view from which the people, events, and details of a story are viewed, is important to consider when reading a story.
What is the point of view in "A Jury of Her Peers?" Is it fixed or does it change? Does it stay the same distance from the events of the story, or does it zoom in and zoom out, like a camera lens? Who is telling the story?
Types of Point of View
Objective Point of
View
With the objective point of view, the writer tells what happens without
stating more than can be inferred
from the story's action and dialogue. The narrator never discloses
anything
about what the characters think or feel, remaining a detached
observer.
Third Person Point of
View
Here the narrator does not participate in the action of the story as one
of the
characters, but lets us know exactly how the characters feel. We learn
about the characters through this outside voice.
First Person Point of
View
In the first person point of view, the narrator does participate in the
action of the story. When reading stories
in the first person, we need to realize that what the narrator is
recounting
might not be the objective truth. We should question the trustworthiness
of
the accounting.
Omniscient and Limited Omniscient Points
of View
A narrator who knows everything about all the characters is all knowing,
or
omniscient.
A narrator whose knowledge is limited to one character, either major or minor, has a limited omniscient point of view.
As you read a piece of fiction think about these things:
How does the point of view affect your responses to the characters? How is your response influenced by how much the narrator knows and how objective he or she is? First person narrators are not always trustworthy. It is up to you to determine what is the truth and what is not.
Think about the ways that point of view is used to help you solve the murder in "A Jury of Her Peers."
http://www.learner.org/interactives/literature/read/pov2.html