Wednesday, September 9, 2015

Blog 2A

     Narratives teach lessons that everyone needs to know in a way that can keep the learners attention. By knowing who the audience is, can also create a greater outcome. The way the narrative is told can construct a message. Just by telling it in the logical sequence it happened in, shows the cause and effect that certain choices have on future decisions. That also helps to prove that narratives are support for a larger argument, but that doesn't matter if you don't know who you're talking to.
     By knowing your audience, you can pull out experiences that relate better to them, thus, helping them to be able to apply the lesson easier. Throughout every storyline there can also be references to the past, or even foreshadowing, that can encourage the reader to think even harder about the narrative. Everything comes down to who you're talking to. That's where you'll find your voice.

No comments:

Post a Comment