The Elusive Promise of the First Person
Critics at Large | The New Yorker
The New Yorker
4.4 • 679 Ratings
🗓️ 9 January 2025
⏱️ 48 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
The first person is a narrative style as old as storytelling itself—one that, at its best, allows us to experience the world through another person’s eyes. On this episode of Critics at Large, Vinson Cunningham, Naomi Fry, and Alexandra Schwartz trace how the technique has been used across mediums throughout history. They discuss the ways in which fiction writers have played with the unstable triangulation between author, reader, and narrator, as in Vladimir Nabokov’s “Lolita” and Bret Easton Ellis’s “American Psycho,” a book that adopts the perspective of a serial killer, and whose publication provoked public outcry. RaMell Ross’s “Nickel Boys”—an adaptation of Colson Whitehead’s 2019 novel—is a bold new attempt to deploy the first person onscreen. The film points to a larger question about the bounds of narrative, and of selfhood: Can we ever truly occupy someone else’s point of view? “The answer, in large part, is no,” Cunningham says. “But that impossibility is, for me, the actual promise: not the promise of a final mind meld but a confrontation, a negotiation with the fact that our perspectives really are our own.”
Read, watch, and listen with the critics:
“Nickel Boys” (2024)
“The Nickel Boys,” by Colson Whitehead
“Lolita,” by Vladimir Nabokov
“Meet the Director Who Reinvented the Act of Seeing,” by Salamishah Tillet (The New York Times)
“Great Books Don’t Make Great Films, but ‘Nickel Boys’ Is a Glorious Exception,” by Richard Brody (The New Yorker)
“Lady in the Lake” (1947)
“Dark Passage” (1947)
“Enter the Void” (2010)
“The Blair Witch Project” (1999)
Doom (1993)
“The Berlin Stories,” by Christopher Isherwood
“American Psycho,” by Bret Easton Ellis
“The Adventures of Augie March,” by Saul Bellow
“Why Did I Stop Loving My Cat When I Had a Baby?” by Anonymous (The Cut)
“Harmony and Dissonance: Orphism in Paris, 1910-1930” at the Guggenheim Museum
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| 0:00.0 | Happy New Year from Critics at Large, a podcast from The New Yorker. |
| 0:08.1 | I'm Alex Schwartz. |
| 0:09.2 | I'm Nomi Fry. |
| 0:10.3 | And I'm Vincent Cunningham. |
| 0:12.1 | Old Langs-Sign. |
| 0:13.0 | We're back, baby. |
| 0:14.2 | Oh, yeah. |
| 0:14.6 | Each week on this show, we make sense of what's happening in the culture right now and how we got here. |
| 0:20.7 | And we are back on the case. |
| 0:22.9 | New year, new episode, new us, you'll just have to see. Oh, yeah. But this is an episode that we've |
| 0:29.5 | all been looking forward to chomping at the bit, I would say. It's all about the first person. |
| 0:36.9 | Now, as I'm sure many of you know, this is the technique in literature and many of the other arts that really puts us in the eyes of another person, characterized, of course, by the first person, singular pronoun. |
| 0:49.6 | It's all about the eye. |
| 0:50.9 | It's all about the eye. |
| 0:51.9 | The eye, but also the E-Y-E-I. Through somebody else's eyes. |
| 0:55.6 | Nice. |
| 0:56.5 | Today we're talking about some of the biggest hits. |
| 0:59.4 | Yeah, it really is nice. |
| 1:01.7 | Anne misses of first-person stories. |
| 1:04.4 | We're going to kind of do a tour of this technique, and it shows up in really any medium that you can think of. |
| 1:10.5 | Do you guys have maybe first-person |
| 1:12.7 | stories or experiences in the arts that kind of come up for you? |
... |
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