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English 217 |
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Dialogue
Often narration calls
for dialogue to be used. Dialogue can add dramatization and excitement to narration,
and it is often used to reveal conflict directly, without the narrator's intruding
commentary. Dialogue can help readers gain insight into the personality and
motives of the characters. Many narratives include the exact words stated by
the characters, often in conversations between them. Dialogue must be appropriate
to the characters and illustrate the personality of each of the characters.
Care must be taken not to overdo the use of dialects which may seem artificial;
dialogue should advance the story not slow it down. Only those conversations
that further the story should be included. Writers should take care not to be
too flowery and avoid "fancy" language. Much editing will probably be necessary
to accomplish effective use of dialogue. Mark Twain was able to give life to
his characters in Tom Sawyer using dialogue while many other writers
destroy their credibility by inappropriate dialogue.
In using dialogue,
be sure that your word choice and the manner of speaking is realistic according
to the character's education, background, age, location, etc. You want to use
dialogue to make your characters more realistic and interesting. Also, be careful
not to use dialogue that is not essential to the narrative.
Be sure to punctuate
dialogue correctly by setting it off from the speaker with commas and by enclosing
it in quotation marks.
Examples
Direct thoughts also need to be treated as dialogue with correct punctuation.
Examples