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First-person narrative : ウィキペディア英語版 | First-person narrative
A first-person narrative is a story from the first-person perspective: the viewpoint of a character writing or speaking directly about themselves. In films, videos, or video games, a first-person perspective may also mean that the narrative is shot or presented as if directly coming from a character's in-body point of view, portraying exactly what the character sees or experiences. Example: first person shooters. The narrators of written works explicitly refer to themselves using variations of "I" (the first-person singular pronoun) and/or "we" (the first-person plural pronoun), typically as well as other characters. This allows the reader or audience to see the point of view (including opinions, thoughts, and feelings) only of the narrator, and no other characters. In some stories, first-person narrators may refer to information they have heard from the other characters, in order to try to deliver a larger point of view. Other stories may switch from one narrator to another, allowing the reader or audience to experience the thoughts and feelings of more than one character or character plural. ==Forms== First-person narratives can appear in several forms; interior monologue, as in Fyodor Dostoevsky's ''Notes from Underground''; dramatic monologue, also in Albert Camus' ''The Fall''; or explicitly, as Mark Twain's ''Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.''
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