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Tangent: The Powerpoint

Topic 2: Perspective and POV. Tangent: The Powerpoint. You Know What Perspective Is. Ex: Two characters, a bubbleheaded romantic and a cynical snarker , watching the same movie.

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Tangent: The Powerpoint

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  1. Topic 2: Perspective and POV Tangent: The Powerpoint

  2. You Know What Perspective Is • Ex: Two characters, a bubbleheaded romantic and a cynical snarker, watching the same movie. • “Aaah, I can’t handle the way he looks at her! If someone looked at me like that in real life I think I’d just die. His eyes are just so intense and deep and gorgeous and THIS IS THE BEST MOVIE EVER.” • “If they have one more dramatic staring session, I’m going to kill everyone in this theater.”

  3. You Also Know What POV Is • 1st Person: I, Me, My • Good for character-driven pieces with either 1 narrator (or a few very different ones). • 2nd Person: You • Don’t use second person – it’s hard to write, and anthologies and contests generally don’t allow it

  4. Limited or Omniscient? • 3rd Person: He/She, Him/Her, They, and so on • Good for stories that require numerous points of view • 3rd Person Limited: • Focuses on the thoughts and narration of one person at a time. 1st person that more easily allows more than one protagonist. • 3rd Person Omniscient: • Focuses on everyone’s thoughts at once, or tells the story from a faceless narrator’s point of view.

  5. Bonus: Snicket Narration • The Fourth Wall • Most likely named for either stage plays or television, the fourth wall is another name for the TV screen/stage front that separates the audience and the story from each other. • The fourth wall is “broken” when a character within a work is shown to be aware of the audience, or simply that they are fictional. • A narrator who may have a distinct personality and/or addresses the reader directly, but who is not a character themselves. • As the title of this slide suggests, Lemony Snicket was fond of this.

  6. The Perspective Challenges • Tackle the same scene from two different perspectives or points of view • 200-250 words each • Option 1: 1st Person and 3rd Person (Limited or Omniscient) • Option 1.5: 3rd Person Limited and 3rd Person Omniscient • Option 2: As seen by 2 different characters • Option 3: 2 different characters, but one of the narrators is lying.

  7. The Perspective Challenge: Cosine • Draw two versions of the same object: one good, one evil.

  8. Going Further • Take on more than one of the writing challenges. • Read something by Lemony Snicket. • Note: NO CLASS NEXT WEEK.

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