The narrative perspective, or point of view, is the vantage point from which events of a story are filtered and then relayed to the audience.
The difference between perspective and point of view
A point of view is a narration style, a method used by the author to present the character’s perspectives of an event and their ideological viewpoints. Narrators tell the story, but the way they tell the reader the story is significant to the work’s plot and themes.
In literature, the narrative point of view is crucial for understanding the perspectives of who is telling the storyand who sees the story.
Narrative perspective definition
There are different types of narrative perspectives or points of view (POV):
povpronounsprosconsfirst personI / Me / Myself / Our / We / Us– The reader has an immersive (sensory) experience with the narrator and events. – Access to the narrator’s thoughts and feelings. – First-hand account (or eye witness) to events in the text. – The reader is limited to the first person’s point of view of events. – The reader does not know the thoughts or points of view of other characters.second personyou– Immersive experience with the narrator like in first person. – Rare POV, which means it is unusual and memorable.– The narrator constantly says ‘You’ which means that the reader is unsure if they’re being addressed. – The reader is uncertain of their level of participation in the text.Third-person LimitedHe / She / They Him/Her/Them– The reader experiences some distance from the events. – Third-person can be more objective than First. – The reader is not limited to the first person’s ‘eye’.– The reader can only gain information from the third-person narrator’s mind and point of view. – Perspective of events remains limited.Third-person OmniscientHe / She / They Him/Her/Them– The most objective / unbiased point of view. – The reader gets full knowledge of all characters and situations.– The reader has a reduced immediacy or immersion with events. – The reader experiences distance from the characters and has more characters to remember.Multiple personMultiple pronouns, usually he / she / they.– The reader is offered multiple points of view on one event. – The reader benefits from different points of view and gains different information without the need to go omniscient. – Like Omniscient, there are multiple main/focal characters, making it hard for the reader to identify with. – The reader may struggle to keep track of perspectives and points of view.
As the table shows, a narrative point of view varies according to the narrator’s degree of participation in the story.
What are the narrative perspective types?
There are five different types of narrative perspective:
- First person narratives
- Second person narratives
- Third person limited narrative
- Third-person omniscient narrative
- Multiple points of view
Let’s have a look at each of them in turn.
What is a first person narrative?
The first-person point of view relies on first-person pronouns – I, we. the first-person narrator has a close relationship with the reader. The reader can get a deeper understanding of the first-person narrator’s mind more than the other characters. However, the first person can only tell the audience their memories and restricted knowledge of events. The first person cannot relate events or insights into other characters’ mindsso this is a subjective point of view.
Narrative perspective examples – Jane Eyre
At Charlotte Bronte’s jane eyre (1847), the bildungsroman is narrated in the first-person point of view.
How people feel when they are returning home from an absence, long or short, I didn’t know: I had never experienced the sensation. I had known what it was to come back to Gateshead when a child, after a long walk – to be scolded for looking cold or gloomy; and later, what it was to come back from church to Lowood – to long for a plenteous meal and a good fire, and to be unable to get either. Neither of these returns were very pleasant or desirable.
Narrative perspective analysis – Jane Eyre
The titular Jane Eyre describes events at the moment she experiences them, and the novel features a series of reflections on her early life. By looking at this example’s point of view, we see that Jane Eyre imparts her loneliness to the reader because of her emphasis on the ‘I’. Bronte establishes that Jane has never experienced a ‘home’ for herself, and because it is in the first person, it appears as a confession to the reader.
First-person narratives also allow narrators to witness an event or impart an alternative point of view.
First-person narratives allow narrators to witness an event. – freepik.com
In an inventive ‘prequel’ to Jane Eyre, Wide Sargasso Sea (1966), Jean Rhys has written a parallel novel that also uses first-person narrative. It explores Antoinette Cosway’s (Bertha’s) perspective before the events of Jane Eyre. Antoinette, a Creole heiress, describes her youth in Jamaica and her unhappy marriage to Mr Rochester. Antoinette’s account is strange because she speaks, laughs, and yells in Wide Sargasso Sea but is silent in jane eyre. The first-person point of view allows Antoinette to reclaim her narrative voice and namewhich means the novel features a postcolonial and feminist viewpoint.
In this room I wake up early and lie shivering for it is very cold. At last Grace Poole, the woman who looks after me lights a fire with paper and sticks and lumps of coal. The paper shrivels, the sticks crackle and spit, the coal smoulders and glowers. In the end flames shoot up and they are beautiful. I get out of bed and go close to watch them and to wonder why I have been brought here. For what reason?
The use of the first-person point of view emphasizes Antoinette’s confusion when arriving in England. Antoinette requests sympathy from the reader, who knows what is happening to Antoinette and what will happen during the events of Jane Eyre.
Tip: The first-person point of view offers an immersive experience for the reader. Why would authors want the reader to be immersed in the first-person’s perspective if the narrator is potentially biased or is driven by their personal motivations?
What is a second-person narrative?
The second-person point of view means the speaker narrates the story through second-person pronouns – ‘You’. The second-person narrative is far less common in fiction than first or third-person and assumes that an implied audience is experiencing the narrated events along with the speaker. It has the immediacy of the first person, yet calls attention to the process of narration which limits a back and forth involvement between narrator and audience.
Narrative perspective examples
Tom Robbins Half Asleep in Frog pajamas (1994) is written in the second-person point of view:
Your propensity to be easily, blatantly embarrassed is one of the several things that annoys you about your lot in the world, one more example of how the fates love to spit in your consomme. The company at your table is another.’
Robbin’s second-person point of view implies the narrator is in a difficult situation concerning the financial market. The point of view sets the tone for the whole novel, and emphasizes the narrator’s distress which the reader has an ambiguous part of – is the reader a witness, or the active participant to the distress?
Tip: When do you think the second-person point of view is most needed in fiction?
What is a third-person limited narrative?
Third-person limited is a point of view where the narrative is focused on one character’s limited point of view. Third-person limited narrative is the story’s narration through the third-person pronouns: he / she / they. The reader has a certain amount of distance from the narrator so has a more objective view of events because they are not limited to the first-person narrator’s eye.
Narrative perspective examples – James Joyce’s Dubliners
Consider this extract from ‘Eveline’ in James Joyce’s short story collection Dubliners (1914):
She had consented to go away, to leave her home. What that wise? She tried to weigh each side of the question. In her home anyway she had shelter and food; she had those whom she had known all her life about her. Of course she had to work hard, both in the house and at business. What would they say of her in the stores when they found out that she had run away with a fellow?
The reader has unique access to Eveline’s dilemma about whether to leave her home. The distance between the reader and her point of view means that Eveline is isolated in her thoughts. Her uncertainty about her decision and other people’s possible reactions emphasizes the fact that readers don’t know what she is going to do, despite knowing about her inner thoughts.
What is a third-person omniscient narrative?
A third-person omniscient narrator provides an all-knowing point of view while still using third-person pronouns. There is an external narrator who assumes this all-knowing perspective. The narrator comments on multiple characters and their thoughts and perspectives on other characters. the omniscient narrator can inform the reader about plot details, inner thoughts, or hidden events that are happening outside of the characters’ awareness or in places far away. The reader is distanced from the narrative.
Narrative perspectives – Pride and Prejudice
Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice (1813) is a famous example of the omniscient point of view
It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife. However little known the feelings or views of such a man may be on his first entering a neighborhood, this truth is so well fixed in the minds of the surrounding families, that he is considered as the rightful property of some one or other of their daughters .
The narrator assumes they know and can reveal everything to the implied audience about Regency society. The ‘truth universally acknowledged’ implies a collective knowledge – or prejudice! – about relationships and links the themes of marriage and wealth presented in the novel.
Tip: When analyzing the third-person point of view consider who knows what, and how much the narrator knows.
What are multiple points of view?
Multiple points of view show the events of a story from the position of two or more characters. The multiple points of view create complexity in the narrative, develop suspense, and reveal an unreliable narrator – a narrator who offers a distorted or vastly different account of the narrative’s events. The multiple characters have unique perspectives and voices, which helps the reader distinguish who is telling the story.
However, the reader needs to keep a close eye on who is speaking and the point of view being adopted at certain moments of the novel.
An example of multiple points of view is Leigh Bardugo’s Six of Crows (2015), where the narrative switches between the six different perspectives on a single dangerous heist.
Tip: Consider a group discussion where you have three narrators relating one crucial event. In this group, there is one narrator who always tells a story with over-exaggerated detail, one whom you know often lies unless it is about something important, and one who downplays their narration of events because they are shy and don’t like to be in the spotlight. Which of these narrators would you consider an unreliable narrator?