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unreliable narrator. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
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English
Etymology
Apparently coined by the U.S. literary critic Wayne Clayson Booth (1921–2005) in The Rhetoric of Fiction (1961):[1] see the quotation.
Pronunciation
Noun
unreliable narrator (plural unreliable narrators)
- (literary theory) A narrating character or storyteller in a literary or other artistic work (such as a film, novel, play, or song) who provides conflicting, inaccurate, misleading, or otherwise questionable information to the audience or reader.
- Coordinate term: omniscient narrator
1961, Wayne C Booth, “Types of Narration”, in The Rhetoric of Fiction, Chicago, Ill., London: University of Chicago Press, published 1968, →OCLC, part I (Artistic Purity and the Rhetoric of Fiction), pages 158 and 159:[page 158] For practical criticism probably the most important of these kinds of distance is that between the fallible or unreliable narrator and the implied author who carries the reader with him in judging the narrator. […] [page 159] Unreliable narrators thus differ markedly depending on how far and in what direction they depart from the author's norms; […]
1969 September, Charles A. Watkins, “Chaucer’s Sweete Preest”, in Earl R. Wasserman et al., editors, ELH [English Literary History], volume 36, number 3, Baltimore, Md.: The Johns Hopkins Press, →DOI, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 463:The Priest also places a moral barrier between himself and his tale by establishing himself as an "unreliable narrator" capable of deception and irony. Thus, through his habit of speaking equivocally, he can disavow responsibility for his frequently provocative words.
1998, “Afterword”, in William Gilmore Simms, edited by John Caldwell Guilds, Helen Halsey or The Swamp State of Conelachita: A Tale of the Borders (Selected Fiction of William Gilmore Simms), Arkansas edition, Fayetteville, Ark.: University of Arkansas Press, →ISBN, page 137:As a young and inexperienced observer, Meadows represents the unreliable narrator whose views are sometimes wrong; but he learns from his mistakes and grows in perceptiveness and wisdom as the novel progresses.
2000 April 17, Richard Corliss, “A Yuppie’s Killer Instinct [review of American Psycho]”, in Time, New York, N.Y.: Time Warner Publishing, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 2010-11-22:[…] Patrick, for all his brutal truth telling, is an unreliable narrator. You see, he is mad—so mad, he probably committed the murders in his head. Which still makes him one sick yuppie.
2011, Judy Doenges, “The Truthless Narrator”, in Andrea Barrett, Peter Turchi, editors, A Kite in the Wind: Fiction Writers on Their Craft, San Antonio, Tex.: Trinity University Press, →ISBN, page 44:Simply put, an unreliable narrator is one whose version of events runs counter to the story's true actions and to readers' interpretation of those events. Unreliable narrators are connivers, lunatics, and innocents, but what they all have in common is their unreliability as storytellers, their rejection or ignorance of the truth. Unreliable narrators equivocate, lie, fib, avoid, defend, divert, create decoys, flee, impersonate, change costumes, remake themselves and their origins, and distort the other characters' actions and intentions, breaking the rules in order to ensure readers' sympathy.
Translations
narrating character or storyteller who provides questionable information to the audience or reader
- Armenian: անվստահելի պատմիչ (anvstaheli patmičʻ)
- Azerbaijani: etibarsız hekayəçi, etibarsız rəvayətçi
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 不可靠的敘事者 / 不可靠的叙事者 (bùkěkàodexùshìzhě)
- Dutch: onbetrouwbare verteller m, onbetrouwbare vertelster f
- Finnish: epäluotettava kertoja
- French: narrateur douteux m, narratrice douteuse f; narrateur incertain m, narratrice incertaine f, narrateur non fiable m, narratrice non fiable f
- German: unzuverlässiger Erzähler m, unzuverlässige Erzählerin f
- Greek: αναξιόπιστος αφηγητής m (anaxiópistos afigitís)
- Indonesian: pengisah lancung
- Italian: narratore inaffidabile m, narratrice inaffidabile f
- Japanese: 信頼できない語り手 (しんらいできないかたりて, shin rai dekinai ka tarite)
- Korean: 믿을 수 없는 화자 (mideul su eomneun hwaja)
- Macedonian: неси́гурен раска́жувач m (nesíguren raskážuvač), неси́гурна раскажу́вачка f (nesígurna raskažúvačka)
- Polish: no equivalent term in Polish, but see nieufny narrator m
- Portuguese: narrador não-confiável m, narradora não-confiável f
- Russian: ненадёжный расска́зчик m (nenadjóžnyj rasskázčik), ненадёжный расска́зчица f (nenadjóžnyj rasskázčica)
- Spanish: narrador sospechoso m, narradora sospechoso f
- Thai: ผู้บรรยายเรื่องผู้ไม่น่าเชื่อถือ
- Turkish: güvenilmez anlatıcı
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References
- ^ Wayne C Booth (1961) “Types of Narration”, in The Rhetoric of Fiction, Chicago, Ill., London: University of Chicago Press, published 1968, →OCLC, part I (Artistic Purity and the Rhetoric of Fiction), pages 158–159: “For lack of better terms, I have called a narrator reliable when he speaks for or acts in accordance with the norms of the work (which is to say, the implied author's norms), unreliable when he does not.”
Further reading