ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Language Arts Videos 92 videos
In this lesson we'll subject you to some verbs and predicates. Each one is a necessary part of a complete breakfas—er...sentence.
Choosing words carefully is important. You may end up vexing the assemblage of citizens you're conversing with...or you might even just plain bore...
ELA 4: Point of View 324 Views
Share It!
Description:
Point of view is exactly what is sounds like: the personal perspective of a given character or narrator. We have points of view, too. They're those things that sometimes get us into trouble when we start discussing politics over Christmas dinner.
Transcript
- 00:00
Thank you We sneak Every story whether it's about cats
- 00:15
dogs cats dogs or even something that has nothing to
- 00:18
do with cats or dogs has a certain point of
- 00:21
view point of view is exactly what it sounds like
- 00:24
the perspective from which the story is told whether that
Full Transcript
- 00:27
of a character or a narrator there are three general
- 00:30
kinds of point of view first person second person and
- 00:34
third person you should know that not unlike a pokemon
- 00:38
gold star trading card The second person perspective is incredibly
- 00:42
rare A second person story is told from the perspective
- 00:45
of you the reader So unless you're reading and choose
- 00:47
your own adventure book you're very unlikely to find the
- 00:50
second person being used so third in first person are
- 00:54
much more A first person story is told from the
- 00:56
perspective of one of the characters which could be fun
- 01:00
or terrifying As a reader we get to experience everything
- 01:04
they experience not just sensory information but also all of
- 01:08
their thoughts and emotions Because of that we really get
- 01:11
to connect with this one character A third person story
- 01:14
isn't told from the perspective of any particular character where
- 01:17
just told what happens It might focus on a particular
- 01:20
character and it might even reveal their thoughts and feelings
- 01:23
but it isn't actually told from their perspective example time
- 01:27
Check out this excerpt from the adventures of huckleberry finn
- 01:30
by mark twain it was about doc now so i
- 01:33
dropped the canoe down the river under some willows that
- 01:36
hung over the bank and waited for the moon to
- 01:38
grass I made fast to willow then i took a
- 01:41
bat to eat and buy and buy laid down in
- 01:44
the canoe to smoke a pop and lay out a
- 01:46
plan of the continued use of eye We can tell
- 01:49
that this is definitely being told from the first person
- 01:52
In fact the entire book is told directly from the
- 01:55
perspective of the character of huck finn which is interesting
- 01:58
since he couldn't read or write He must have had
- 02:00
a good transcriber but what if we wanted to make
- 02:03
this a bit more like one of the harry potter
- 02:05
books Those stories do follow harry's adventures but they're not
- 02:08
actually told from his perspective that is there in third
- 02:11
person so let's see what that text would look like
- 02:14
in third person for one thing all of those eyes
- 02:16
will have to go We'll probably have to lose a
- 02:18
bit of hooks individual voice to stuff like it was
- 02:21
about doc now and i made fast or took about
- 02:25
to eat and by and by i laid down in
- 02:27
the canoe definitely reflect huck's voice so they might not
- 02:31
stick around and we're just describing the situation room a
- 02:33
third person perspective It might end up looking something like
- 02:36
this for mark twain will probably be rolling in his
- 02:39
grave find by if another wants to get really fancy
- 02:43
they might even use dual narratives Thes can either be
- 02:46
first or third person but either way the story follows
- 02:48
two particular characters showing the connections between their lives These
- 02:52
stories can be really fun especially when they connect to
- 02:55
separate characters in a way you've never expect like that
- 02:58
One time you and your little brother accidentally bonded when
- 03:00
the power went out and there was nothing else to
- 03:02
do An example of a duel narrative can be found
- 03:05
in a long walk to water This story is told
- 03:07
from the perspectives of two sudanese children nian salva in
- 03:11
different circumstances nias a young girl in a poor family
- 03:14
who is unable to go to school instead she has
- 03:16
to spend her days walking to the nearest water sources
- 03:19
to get water for her family Soundly on the other
- 03:21
hand is a young boy from a well respected family
- 03:24
was a large farm He doesn't have to worry as
- 03:26
much as me about what he'll have to eat or
- 03:28
drink Lucky him However at the time of salvos narrative
- 03:31
a civil war is raging in sudan and when his
- 03:34
village is attacked he has to fleet Though these two
- 03:36
kids come from very different backgrounds their perspective show us
- 03:40
two kinds of hardships that we're faced in sudan giving
- 03:43
us a deeper appreciation of how tough life was and
- 03:45
is in that part of the world It certainly doesn't
- 03:48
work is attempting travel for sure Let me tell you
- 03:51
whether it's told in the first person second person or
- 03:54
third person or even a dual narrative all stories have
- 03:57
a point of view Our point of view is that 00:03:59.79 --> [endTime] up that's pretty cool See what we did there
Related Videos
Sticks and stones, right? Well...only sometimes. It's a good idea to make sure your words aren't going to hurt others. Let's look at some ways to d...
Learn to debate like a champ. It's way better than debating like a chimp. That just takes mudslinging to a whole new level.
Today we'll learn about biographies and autobiographies. And no, the second one has nothing to do with the lives of cars.
In this lesson we'll subject you to some verbs and predicates. Each one is a necessary part of a complete breakfas—er...sentence.
Choosing words carefully is important. You may end up vexing the assemblage of citizens you're conversing with...or you might even just plain bore...