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Narrative Perspective

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Presentation on theme: "Narrative Perspective"— Presentation transcript:

1 Narrative Perspective
Point of View Practice 1 Narrative Perspective

2 Directions We will read the passages.
You will determine the point of view. Write your answers on a separate sheet of paper. Write at least one sentence explaining your answer.

3 The Abominable Snowman By R.A. Montgomery
You are a mountain climber. Three years ago you spent the summer at a climbing school in the mountains of Colorado. Your instructors said that you had natural skills as a climber. You made rapid progress and by the end of the summer you were leading difficult rock and ice climbs.

4 Narrative Point of View Passage #1
. 2nd-Person

5 Outside the Box By Dan Allosso
Three shots like thunderclaps rang out from surround speakers in the basement rec room. A white controller jumped in Reid Anderson’s hand each time he squeezed the trigger. Tactile feedback. A speaker in the controller made snapping sounds like the action of a pistol. Reid felt this more than he heard it. The shots made his ears ring.

6 Narrative Point of View passage #2
. 3rd-Person Limited

7 Teen Idol By Meg Cabot I witnessed the kidnapping of Betty Ann Mulvaney. Well, me and the twenty-three other people in first period Latin class at Clayton High School (student population 1,200). Unlike everybody else, however, I actually did something to try and stop it. Well, sort of. I went, “Kurt, what are you doing?” Kurt just rolled his eyes. He was all, “Relax, Jen. It’s a joke, okay?”

8 Passage #3 1st-Person

9 Understood Betsy By Dorothy Canfield
Aunt Harriet never meant to say any of this when Elizabeth Ann could hear, but the little girl’s ears were as sharp as little girls’ ears always are, and long before she was nine, she knew all about the opinion Aunt Harriet had of the Putneys. She did not know, to be sure, what “chores” were, but she took it confidently from Aunt Harriet’s voice that they were something very, very dreadful.

10 Passage #4 3rd-Person Omniscient

11 I Am Number Four By Pittacus Lore
The man brings his legs over the front of the cot when the shake starts again. A longer, firmer shake, and another crash, this time closer. The man gets to his feet and walks slowly to the door. Silence. The boy sits up. “No,” the man whispers, and in that instant the blade of a sword, long and gleaming, made of a shining white metal that is not found on Earth, comes through the door and sinks deeply into the man’s chest.

12 Passage #5 3rd-Person Objective

13 The Magic School Bus: Inside the Human Body By Joanna Cole and Bruce Degen
It all began when Ms. Frizzle showed our class a film strip about the human body. We knew trouble was about to start, because we knew Ms. Frizzle was the strangest teacher in the school.

14 Passage #6 1st-Person

15 Glinda of Oz By Frank L. Baum
Ozma took the arm of her hostess, but Dorothy lagged behind. When at last she rejoined Glinda and Ozma in the hall, she found them talking earnestly about the condition of the people, and how to make them more happy and contented– although they were already the happiest and most contented folks in all the world. This interested Ozma, of course, but it didn’t interest Dorothy very much, so the little girl ran over to the big table on which was lying open Glinda’s Great Book of Records.

16 Passage #7 . 3rd-Person Omniscient

17 The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Teens By Sean Covey
The 7 Habits of Highly Defective Teens Habit 1: React - Blame all of your problems on your parents, your stupid teachers or professors, your lousy neighborhood, your boyfriend or girlfriend, or something or somebody else. Be a victim. Take no responsibility for your life. Act like an animal. If you’re hungry, eat. If someone yells at you, yell back. If you feel like you’re doing something you know is wrong, just do it.

18 Passage #8 2nd-Person

19 Eragon (Inheritance) By Christopher Paolini
Eragon knelt in a bed of trampled reed grass and scanned the tracks with a practiced eye. The prints told him that the deer had been in the meadow only a half hour before. Soon they would bed down. His target, a small doe with a pronounced limp in her left forefoot, was still in the herd. He was amazed she had made it so far without a wolf or a bear catching her.

20 Passage #9 . 3rd-Person Limited

21 The Grapes of Wrath By John Steinbeck
The last rains lifted the corn quickly and scattered weed colonies and grass along the sides of the road. In the last part of May the sky grew pale and the clouds that had hung in high puffs for so long in the spring were dissipated. The sun flared down on the growing corn day after day until a line of brown spread along the edge of each green bayonet. The clouds appeared, and went away, and in a while they did not try anymore. The weeds grew darker green to protect themselves, and they did not spread anymore.

22 Passage #10 3rd-Person Objective

23 Answers 1. 2nd-Person 2. 3rd-Person Limited 3. 1st-Person
4. 3rd-Person Omniscient 5. 3rd-Person Objective 6. 1st-Person 7. 3rd-Person Omniscient 8. 2nd-Person 9. 3rd-Person Limited 10. 3rd-Person Objective


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