Focus Shift - A deliberate change in the narrative's focus or perspective. Example: moving from setting to character, or inside to outside., Zooming - When the writer moves from a broad view to focus in on key details/descriptions and vice versa., Flashback - The narrative shifts to an earlier moment in time to provide context., Flashforward - The narrative shifts to future events to reveal outcomes/important information., Dialogue - To show speech between characters, revealing character relationships and to move the plot forward., First-Person Narrator - The story is told using “I” or “we.” We see events through the narrator’s own thoughts, feelings, and experiences., Second-Person Narrator - The narrator addresses the reader as “you.” It pulls the reader directly into the action and can create an immersive or unsettling effect., Third-Person Narrator - The story is told using “he,” “she,” “they,” or characters’ names. The narrator can relay the thoughts, feelings or motivations of more than one character.,

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