Monday, April 27, 2020
Narrator Influence Essays - Style, Fiction, Narratology,
  Narrator Influence  "The role of the narrator influences the type of relationship we have not  only with him or her but also with the story" (Landy 75). This quote was  taken from our Literary Studies book in which we have read several stories  concerning different styles of narration. Narration is one of the most important  components of a story. The characters, plot, setting, and theme are also  significant, however the narrator sets the mood and also the pace of the story.    Two good examples of narration is the short tale The Zebra Storyteller by    Spencer Holst and The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman. These are  stories in which the narrators retain certain styles of narration. An outside  book that we have not read is the fairy tale Cinderella. In these three works,  the narrators have specific functions or duties to carry throughout the story.    In The Zebra Storyteller the narrator is a Siamese cat but the narrator is also  an outsider. During the story the cat tells a story to his friends about how  skillful and 'powerful' he is at killing zebras. Towards the end of the story  the cat is handed his fate; he is kicked and killed by a zebra, who sensed  feared when approached. At the end of the story Holst concludes with the  statement, "That is the function of the storyteller." This statement  pertains to the idea of the function the storyteller has or how they create the  atmosphere and set the grounds in which the story is based on. There are many  functions of the storyteller. They can teach a lesson, control the story,  entertain, and stretch one's own imagination. In this story it is a great  example how the story can take a sudden unexpected turn and shock the reader.    The narrator can take twists and turns and can make expected or even unexpected  outcomes in the story. A good example in the story would be where the narrator  states, "The zebra storyteller wasn't fit to be tied at hearing a cat  speaking his language, because he'd been thinking about that very thing" (Holst    1971). At this point the narrator changes the reader's perspective and sheds  light on an upcoming event in the story. Which turned out to be a big event  where the Siamese cat got killed. Of course this story is fictional but it is an  excellent story to portray how a narrator can expand the reader's imagination.    The Yellow Wallpaper is a story in that one of the different styles of narration  is prevalent. Some types of unique styles of narration writing are story  telling, diary style, or telling a story about a day's experience. The Yellow    Wallpaper is in diary format which means the narrators internal thoughts are  exposed in the story as well as their outside thoughts, meaning how they deal  with the other characters in the story. This story is about a woman who is in a  mental hospital where she is kept in a room that has very old yellow wallpaper  on the walls. In this story the main character or the narrator is secluded in  this room by herself and is limited to basically doing nothing. As the story  continues the narrator is drawn toward the hideous wallpaper and finds herself  in the wallpaper. In her diary writings she reports, "There are things in  that paper that nobody knows but me, or ever will. Behind that outside pattern  the dim shapes get clearer everyday" (Gilman 83). In her reports she  creates a mysterious, scary mood about the woman she sees in that paper. When  the narrator reveals 'her diary' it allows reading into their thoughts on how  they take in the actions in the story. She lets them into how she feels about  her husband and also she is not allowed to write because he says it is going to  delay her getting better, which she disagrees with. She says, "Personally,    I believe that congenial work, with excitement and change, would do me  good" (Gilman 78). The narrator's function in this story is to set not only  the mood but also the setting. In the beginning she describes her settings very  clearly giving details of her room and the outside gardens. As the story  continues she becomes more abstract due to her deteriorating awareness of  reality. At the end her husband collapses due to the sight of his wife 'creeping  through the wallpaper.' She makes her reader's imagination wonder what really  happens at the end. After he faints she says, "Now why    
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