tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8783736325336444014.post4629690295381478570..comments2024-03-27T06:42:55.940-07:00Comments on K L E U R R I J K: Stream of consciousness. Geri Meftah Arthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00596915249757782612noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8783736325336444014.post-3116569219056471132014-03-13T19:05:30.520-07:002014-03-13T19:05:30.520-07:00Interessant deze 'techniek' van schrijven ...Interessant deze 'techniek' van schrijven en leuk om kennis van te nemen via jouw mooie verslag. Heb direct een zoekslag gemaakt en trof het volgende aan:<br /> Stream of consciousness writers of the modern age viewed the character as a psychological battlefield. They believed that one could best understand a person or a character by searching within his or her mind, where he or she exists in the truest sense. These writers recognized that there was another significant dimension of human beings, the unobservable subconscious, that traditional authors neglected to use when creating character personalities. Traditionally, characters developed personality from what they said or did, what other characters said about them, and what the omniscient author chose to add. Giving a voice to the unspoken, reflective thoughts, imaginations, conceptions, and sensory feelings of the human psyche, as the modernist "stream of consciousness" writers did, provided the potential for more accurate, comprehensive, and in-depth character development than had existed in the traditional approach.sea4allhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17468615416404720677noreply@blogger.com