American Realism


Complex Characters in Realism


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Complex Characters in Realism

  • Complex characters in realist literature, like real people, react to events in unpredictable ways. 
  • Their behavior reveals multiple motives and conflicting traits, and it evolves with time. 
  • Realist characters are more believable because of these qualities.
  • Mrs. Mallard -

Unreliable Narrators in Realism

Objective

  • In this lesson, you will evaluate how authors use unreliable narrators and other literary techniques for effect in realist literature.

Unreliable Narrators in Realism

Relying on a Narrator

  • When reading a story, audiences expect to be able to trust the narrator and the events that the narrator describes. .
  • Sometimes, though, narrators have an unreliable or untrustworthy perspective on the events in a story. 
  • This limitation creates an unreliable narrator, or a narrator whose story cannot be believed. 
  • In that case, readers must judge for themselves which parts of the narrative are true and which should be called into doubt. 
  • The two main reasons that readers might doubt a narrator's credibility are a lack of sophistication and a lack of sanity.

Unreliable Narrators in Realism

Types of Unreliable Narrators

  • In a story with an unsophisticated narrator, the first-person account often comes from a child's point of view.
  • An example of an unsophisticated narrator comes from the novel To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. Told from the point of view of a young girl, Scout, living in a small town in the 1930s, the story focuses on racial tensions in the community. 
  • The narrator does not understand why race is such a contentious, or controversial, issue. 

Unreliable Narrators in Realism

  • Types of Unreliable Narrators
  • Narrators who display a lack of sanity are also considered unreliable because readers cannot be sure which events actually take place and which occur only in the narrator's imagination.
  • Recall the excerpt from Poe's "The Black Cat.” Is the mark on the cat's chest actually growing, or is the change happening only in the narrator’s mind? 
  • Readers, recognizing that the narrator has shown signs of insanity, must decide for themselves if the action is truly taking place.

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