Many festivals have had performers, narrators, door prizes and a bingo game made to fit the theme. |
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Unlike the absconding narrators who skulk out of sight in most modern novels, James refuses to hide behind the mask of authorial anonymity. |
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The male narrators offer the woman's body as the place where they are momentarily free from the pressures of dissembling a myth of themselves. |
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Even so, the book almost works, because Victor is one of the most unreliable narrators I've met, and he may or may not be having us on. |
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The problem is that some Heldentenors are fine at projecting roles such as Tristan, but aren't natural narrators. |
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In the movies, with their narrators and time-shifts, we accept much more agile storytelling. |
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All us omniscient narrators were getting together to have a few laughs and a few drinks. |
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Although both narrators are prone to purple passages, the texture of Singer's Gothic prose remains one of the novel's strengths. |
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In the first part the narrators reveal and analyze their own natures as well as their corrective visions of the world. |
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The novel employs multiple narrators, including not only the three major characters but also their husbands, children, and parents. |
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The film uses only these two narrators, and bear in mind that they are independent in a world which is very limiting. |
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The novel has two wildly different narrators, and two elaborately intertwined stories. |
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First-person animal narrators often expose the thoughtlessness of human beings toward non-human animals. |
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The narrators relentlessly question their textual fellows as one version of a story challenges and even annihilates its counterparts. |
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All Greek tragedies have choruses, who take on the roles of observers, narrators, commentators and critics. |
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Pushkin's narrators are only schematically described, because what matters is not who they are but how they perceive the world. |
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The narrators are often strangely limited third-person or unreliable first-person narrators, or there are multiple, shifting narrators. |
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Neither poor old Zack's whiskey nor all the puzzlings of narrators and readers will ever know what Zack did. |
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The first movement begins with a gentle melancholy melody for the cellos, more or less playing the role of narrators of the work. |
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In those months, Plath lived above a slightly dotty old man who was one of the unreliable narrators of the Plath legend and the last person to see her alive. |
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Unreliable narrators – those mysterious figures the reader must try to work out – are ten a penny in fiction. |
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McHugh examines the forbidden love of Hariba and the harni through five different first-person narrators. |
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In contemporary fiction with nameless narrators, the real-world, present-day phenomenon of namelessness is not usually confronted. |
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Brown's narrators are lonesome, uncompanionable types, yet they yearn for more. |
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Both of them came from griot families, descendents of wordsmiths and narrators of secular tales transmitted from generation to generation. |
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Most third-person narrators are less like omniscient gods than exceedingly snoopy, well-informed ghosts. |
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The identities of his narrators are fragile, blending with those of the other people whose experiences his books retell. |
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These narrators were renowned in their regions, and folks from all over would turn up to hear, and see them act out their stories. |
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The different narrators cannot hear each other's narrations, yet they do oddly cooperate in the building of the whole narrative. |
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However, working closely with narrators, their families, legal and medical professionals, countless staff and volunteers helped to ensure this. |
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Both individually and in pairs, students use worksheets to find out more about the youth narrators and each other. |
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Extension: Students write stories about the youth narrators with their partners. |
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In the beginning Plan wanted children to play all roles in the dramas, including those of narrators. |
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Finally, you are the child of an oriental Church rooted in History though divided, and which narrators still tune hymns for the glory of God. |
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Throughout the novel, Tostevin fluctuates between two narrators, time frames and languages to emphasize the narrator's, Laura's, split self. |
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The narrators, mainly elderly women, hold a key position in the community, both as historians and preachers. |
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In alternating chapters, the two narrators of the novel describe their lives with Isaac, from two different periods in time. |
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When one of the narrators in a novel is the ghost of a girl who fell to her death in a dumb waiter, you know it's not going to be an ordinary read. |
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In a similar way, Beatrice serves to question the narrative authority of the other narrators in the novel, all of them European-educated and male. |
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The dance drama will have two narrators apart from the on stage dancers. |
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In short, the second type of scrutiny, which is very essential in the criticism of traditions, relates to the constancy and perpetuity of the chain of narrators. |
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If the manner of the telling occasionally recalls MR James's prickly, donnish narrators, that is surely apt. |
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The few remaining narrators, who are already very old, need to be supported in their efforts to transmit their knowledge and to raise awareness among young people. |
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Tired of unreliable narrators and heartless novels that provide more entertainment for the author than the reader, there is a longing to receive news that stays news, as Ezra Pound defined literature. |
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Publications such as Charlie Hebdo exist in a world where their supporters are unreliable narrators of their own motivations, informed by race, class and privilege. |
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Wearable technology offers further feedback on the 'facts' of wellbeing, while people are increasingly viewed as unreliable narrators of their own lives. |
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A number of the passages feel overtold in addition to being overshown: a host of narrators supply the extensive background directly to the audience. |
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Her first-person narrators are always men. |
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And is Morel a true or false Morel, since mushrooms, like narrators, may not be what they appear to be? |
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We will look at the subtleties between first and third person narratives, omniscient narratives, free indirect style, and reliable and unreliable narrators. |
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The oldest narrators were born in tents and have been living as traditional seminomads even after having moved from tents to permanent houses. |
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A plurality of voices, those of the author, narrators and characters, interact in a dialogue creating a heteroglot, a multi-languaged text. |
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Perhaps the same could be done with Hawkins's narrators — three of them, no less, maundering on in the first person, often in the present tense, and each as annoying as the next. |
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His writing style incorporates a number of storytelling techniques such as flashbacks, shifting points of view and unreliable narrators. |
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These stories offer drama, philosophy, romance, tragedy, fantasy and humour, and were created by various narrators over time. |
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The most popular narrators were stars in their own right, solely responsible for the patronage of a particular theatre. |
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The game is laced with quips that break the fourth wall, calling out tired conventions of video games, such as repetitive fetch quests and disembodied narrators. |
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This limerick is uttered by Jethro Furber of Omensetter's Luck, one of William Gass's beleaguered but irrepressible and loquacious, even logorrheic narrators. |
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