The Second Person Identity

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Different perspectives in writing and speech provide distinct moods and tones to relay information to the audience. The four categories of narrative perspective in literature are first person, second person, third person partial, and third person omniscient (Wyile 185). The first person uses the personal pronoun “I” to connect the audience with the narrator intimately, and the third person uses the personal pronouns “he” and “she” to describe the lives of other people through the perspective of an omnipresent narrator. The second person forms a bridge between first and third person, the most common perspectives used in literature.

You are not the kind of guy who would be at a place like this at this time of the morning. But here you are, and you cannot say that the terrain is entirely unfamiliar, although the details are fuzzy. You are at a nightclub talking to a girl with a shaved head. The club is either Heartbreak or the Lizard Lounge. All might come clear if you could just slip into the bathroom and do a little more Bolivian Marching Powder. Then again, it might not. A small voice inside you insists that this epidemic lack of clarity is a result of too much of that already. (McInerney 1)

In the world of prose, readers least often find stories delicately woven with the fine threads of character development interlaced with the strings of plot written in the second person point-of-view. Second person perspective, the you perspective, combines the personal aspect of the first person with the distant tone of the third person (Schofield 13) to create a fuzzy midway narrative voice. The hazy quality of second person narration creates an ideal atmosphere for the narrator and the narratee to develop their identities together.
To qua...

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...ses the third relationship to tell Jean-Baptiste Clamence’s story in The Fall.

Works Cited

Wyile, Andrea Schwenke. "Expanding The View Of First-Person Narration." Children's Literature In
Education 30.3 (1999): 185-202. Literary Reference Center. Web.
McInerney, Jay. Bright Lights, Big City: A Novel. New York: Vintage, 1987. Print.
Schofield, Dennis. The Second Person: A Point of View? The Function of the Second Person
Pronoun in Narrative Prose Fiction. Diss. Deakin University, Victoria, 1998. Print.
Mildorf, Jarmila. "Second-Person Narration in Literary and Conversational
Storytelling."Storyworlds: A Journal of Narrative Studies 4 (2012): 75-98. Print.
Richardson, Brian. Unnatural Voices: Extreme Narration in Modern and Contemporary Fiction. Columbus: Ohio State UP, 2006. Print.
Camus, Albert, and Justin O'Brien. The Fall. New York: A. A. Knopf, 1956. Print.

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