Hi I was wondering if I could get help answering this question. I am really confused on how to approach and talk about how voice can be constructed.
Spoiler
Identify and explain the impact of aspects of the construction of the narrator’s voice.
In an excerpt of the novel ‘The Lovely Bones’ by Alice Sebold, the author’s uses a variety of technical conventions to construct the narrator’s voice. These technical conventions include tone, diction and stylistic choices.
Sebold uses blunt and straightforward sentences throughout the excerpt to construct the tone of detachment in the narrator’s voice. The way the author crafts the sentence ‘I was fourteen when I was murdered’ conveys a tone of detachment. This tone is evidently presented by the way the shocking fate of being murdered is dispassionately addressed. By the narrator. The tone of detachment is further emphasised by how the narrator casually addresses seemingly irrelevant things such as liking ‘border flowers’ and naming her favourite teacher ‘Mr Botte’.
In the excerpt the narrator uses informal language but appeared to be quite guarded. The author uses first person in the excerpt to convey how personal the narrator’s murder was.
It appears that you're off to a really good start! Here are some things to talk about in relation to the construction of voice:
-Modality
-Adverbs used to describe the actual delivering of the voice in dialogue
-Sentence type and variation (short, correctly formed? Long, jumbled?)
-First, second, third person narration?
-If in third person, the omniscient narration?
-The way that verbs compliment the dialogue.
-Tone (which you already have)
-Stylistic decisions (embellished language, simple language)
-Colloquialisms
-Informal or formal register
-Do they use nicknames for some people and full names for other people?
Of course, you can analyse these in relation to each other as well. So colloquialisms, or lack of, will link nicely when talking about the formality of the register. The use of verbs will influence the way that the content of the dialogue comes across to a reader, etc. Does this help? I think you're on the right track indeed, it's just about combining the different aspects together rather than dealing with them in isolation.
