Lecture 18: Evoking Setting and Place in Fiction
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z Of course, setting doesn’t have to slow down the narrative; it can also
evoke speed and danger. In a chase scene from Rosemary Sutcliff’s 7KH
(DJOHRIWKH1LQWK, we delight in the vivid evocation of the landscape
in its own right—luminous green bogs, bronze tides of dying heather—
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description with breathless action.
A Continuum of Setting
z The many ways in which setting can be evoked fall between two ends
of a continuum: At one end, setting is evoked by stopping the narrative
in its tracks and describing a place or a time period. At the other end,
setting is evoked only minimally.
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in narratives similar to %OHDN+RXVH or 7URXEOHV, where the
setting is important to the story, while at the other extreme,
when the setting isn’t that important, writers don’t bother with
it as much.
o In between, there are many variations, including evoking setting
as you go, inserting a few telling details along the way without
stopping the action. As always, most novels and short stories fall
somewhere in between, combining the various methods.
z In narratives that include standalone descriptions of setting, how the
writer uses them depends on the point of view of the novel, whether it’s
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o The omniscient third person is almost cinematic. The opening
of %OHDN+RXVH, for example, is like a crane shot in a movie,
starting high up—“smoke lowering down from chimney-pots,
making a soft black drizzle”—and slowly descending to street
level—“dogs, undistinguishable in mire.” This passage gives
the mind’s eye something to look at, and it introduces a central
metaphor for the plot.