How sure are you about that? : Narratorial uncertainty in third person fiction : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in English at Massey University, Manawatu, New Zealand
Loading...

Files
Date
2013
DOI
Open Access Location
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Massey University
Rights
The Author
Abstract
In third person fiction, if the narrator makes his or her presence felt in the text, the
reader may embody the narrator as part of a naturalisation process. What happens then,
if a third person narrator appears unsure of the facts or events in the story world, or if it
becomes unclear whether it is the narrator or a character who is telling the story? The
reader must engage with some misgiving. However, if we consider the narrator that
discloses their unreliability and appears to have good reason to be unreliable, the reader
must first decide if the narrator is telling the story to the best of his or her ability: if s/he
is being as accurate as possible and not withholding information about the story world.
If the reader perceives the narrator as telling the story in the best way s/he can, then the
reader is less likely to doubt the narrator.
With disclosure and acceptance of unreliability, the narrator continues to be
unreliable but s/he can also be described as “uncertain”. In narratology, “uncertainty”
constitutes a different form of unreliability. With an uncerain narrator the reader and the
narrator must work together in order to uncover the truth of the story. In the case of an
uncertain narrator, the reader returns to the “natural state” of trusting the narrative
voice, but with the awareness that s/he may also have a role in meaning making.
This thesis hypothesises that the use of overt narratorial uncertainty in
heterodiegetic fiction develops a reader-narrator relationship based on trust, rather than
suspicion, as found in other types of unreliable heterodiegetic text: that is to say, the
disclosure of uncertainty by the narrator, together with an awareness of narratorial
uncertainty by the reader, changes the way in which the reader relates to the narrator.
Description
Keywords
Third person fiction, Narration in fiction, Reader uncertainty, Narratology