- Mon Jan 21, 2019 6:29 pm
#61981
Answer A, cathyli1996, describes something much more akin to the non-musical films of the period as described in the first paragraph. "The world of the story is self sufficient" and "Devices that draw attention to to the film as film...are avoided" sound a lot like "without providing information necessary for understanding." That is, the novel doesn't explain itself, but just tells the story as a series of chronological events. The reader, like the viewer of the film, will either understand or not based solely on what happens, and not on how it is framed or explained.
Answer E is best because the story in that hypothetical novel is about the events of a single day. What could the protagonist's thoughts and feelings, presented in a stylistically elaborate way, have to do with those events? They are tangential at best, a distraction, which, while they might shed some light on the character's motives or choices, are not otherwise germane to the chronological series of events unfolding. Think of those as the musical interludes, and your analogy is complete. Winner!
Adam M. Tyson
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