Zusammenfassung der Ressource
narrative situations (F.K. Stanzel)
- first-person narrator
- involved in the world of the story
- Distinction between
narrating I and
experiencing I
("narrative distance")
- there's a timespan
between the actual
events and narration
time
- I-as-witness
vs.
I-as-protagonist
- Dr. John Watson in
Sherlock Holmes and
Nick Carraway in The
Great Gatsby
- limited perspective (often
unreliable)
- Self-expression of the individual
subject in first-person narratives
- Authorial narrator
- narrator not part of the world of the story
- not restricted by
time and place
- can enter a character's thoughts
- omnipresent and omniscient
- Imitation of divine
perspective on the human
world
- often considered more objective than
first-person narrator
- Figural narrative situation
- narrator "disappears" behind a character
- readers share thoughts, feelings, perceptions of a character
- characters as reflector of sensual impressions
is not aware of communication
- showing mode (vs. predominant
telling mode in first-person and
authorial narratives)