Monday, November 28, 2011

From which point of view is this story told?

The story of 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea is told in the first person point of view, and also from a retrospective point of view. The narrator is a professor and a naturalist called Pierre Aronnax, and he is narrating a story which has already taken place. You can see that this is the point of view at the beginning of chapter two:

"At the period when these events took place, I had just returned from a scientific research in the disagreeable territory of Nebraska, in the United States."

Jules Verne chose for the story to be narrated from the point of view of a naturalist so that the reader would trust his account of events as reliable. He is, after all, an expert in matters of the sea. Having a retrospective narrator (a narrator telling a story that has already happened) allows Verne to build suspense. Arronax can tell us, in hindsight, that the story he is about to tell is wonderful and strange, which is a good way of hooking a reader into a story.

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