Sunday, June 2, 2019
The Good Earth Point of View :: Good Earth Essays
  The Good Earth Point of View     The Good Earth is a third-person narrative, but the story it tells is Wang  Lungs. Everything that happens is described as he experiences it and as it  affects him. The narrator explains Wang Lungs thoughts and feelings but almost  never those of other characters. You understand them through their words and  actions.   This is obviously a rather limiting way of  telling a story. In staying  strictly within Wang Lungs experience, the narrator cant be all-knowing. You  might think that the novel could have been written in the first person, with  Wang Lung as the I.  alone this hero is an uneducated, indeed an illiterate  farmer, and if the story were told in his words the novel would be limited not  only to his experiences but to his vocabulary. In using the third-person  flesh  the narrator has somewhat more scope.   Yet the scope is quite limited. For example, when O-lan brings a bowl of tea  to her husband on the first morning of th   eir marriage, you know that she is   shocked of him only because he sees the fear in her expression. Later you see  that O-lan comes to trust her husband from the way that she goes about her work,  taking her full share of the toil as an equal partner, and also from the way she  offers advice to Wang Lung on the rare occasions when a crisis moves her to  break her customary silence.   Just as the characters are described only as they affect Wang Lung, every  event is told only as it relates to him. Drought, flood, locusts--all are part  of the story only as they affect Wang Lung. Wars are fought all over mainland China and  robber bands plunder and murder in the villages, but we learn of these dire  events only as Wang Lung does. His uncle turns out to be a member of a  notorious  band of brigands. He learns that a robber band raided the House of Hwang during  the famine. His cousin brings a band of soldiers into his house. He learns that  his third son has become a  gamy offici   al in the revolution.  
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