A Narrative Analysis of The Unreliable Narrator in Edgar Allan Poe's "The Tell-Tale Heart"
A Narrative Analysis of The Unreliable Narrator in Edgar Allan Poe's "The Tell-Tale Heart"
A Narrative Analysis of The Unreliable Narrator in Edgar Allan Poe's "The Tell-Tale Heart"
By
Ayad Abdul Razzaq Abood
Lecturer
A Narrative Analysis of the Unreliable Narrator In Edgar….....……...………
ﻣﺴﺘﺨﻠﺺ
" ة ا ا ا اوي د اب ا اراه ا
ا ر ا ا . نر أ إد ا "ا اا
ث ا ا اوي ا ا ا واا
ا انض ا . ا رات ا ا ا ق وام
.اوي ا ان و ا ن
Abstract
This study scrutinizes the narrative technique of the unreliable narration in
Edgar Allan Poe's short story "The Tell-Tale Heart." The researcher considers
both the rhetorical and the cognitive approaches in the detection of the unreliable
narrator taking Booth's definition as a starting point and then goes to analyze the
textual signals in the story. The researcher assumes that both models are
complementary and helpful to identify the unreliability of the narrator.
1. Introduction
The narrative technique of unreliable narration is situated in the field of
literary narratology and was pioneered and coined by Wayne C. Booth in his
(1961,1983) book 'The Rhetoric of Fiction.' Ever since Wayne C. Booth first
proposed the unreliable narrator as a concept, it has been considered to be
among the basic and indispensable categories of textual analysis. Booth
(1983:158-59) states that “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.” According to Booth, the
distinction between reliable and unreliable narrators is based on the degree and
kind of distance that separates a given narrator from the implied author of a
work.
Two approaches deal with the concept of unreliable narration differently.
Following Booth's identification of the unreliable narration, proponents of the
rhetorical approach link the concept of the implied author to the unreliable
narrator. According to the cognitive approach, narratologists have removed the
implied author and instead rely on textual signals for the detection of a narrator’s