medium · LSAT Reading Comprehension

Free indirect discourse is often praised as fiction's most intimate instrument. In a sentence such as “Tomorrow would be unbearable,” the grammar may remain in the third person and past tense while the judgment belongs to a character. Because no phrase like “she thought” marks the transition, readers seem to enter the character's mind without passing through a narrator's report. Critics have accordingly treated the technique as a device for reducing distance: the narrative voice yields, and another consciousness becomes directly available.

But the apparent directness is structurally unstable. A sentence colored by a character's vocabulary still occupies the narrator's account, and nothing in its grammar assigns every inflection securely to one speaker. An extravagant adjective may express the character's enthusiasm, the narrator's mockery of that enthusiasm, or both at once. Context can narrow the possibilities, but often does not eliminate them. What readers experience is therefore not unmediated access to a mind; it is uncertainty about where evaluation resides.

Some critics regard that uncertainty as a technical defect that skilled readers learn to resolve. Yet many novels preserve it deliberately. When a status-conscious character describes a shabby room as “charmingly informal,” the phrase can expose self-deception without allowing the narrator to announce a correction. Readers must entertain the character's description while sensing pressure against it. The technique makes judgment possible, but declines to locate judgment in a voice standing safely outside the scene.

Its ethical force follows from this refusal. Sympathy is sometimes imagined as accurate possession of another person's inner life: to sympathize is to know what the other feels. Free indirect discourse offers a less complacent model. It brings a character's idiom close while keeping the source and authority of that idiom unsettled. Proximity is joined to resistance. Readers practice attending to another perspective without assuming that attention has made the perspective transparent.

This stance also changes the work of rereading. A later event may cause an earlier sentence to sound less like neutral narration and more like a character's wish, yet the revised attribution need not cancel the first. The sentence can preserve evidence of how readily readers borrowed the character's categories. Interpretation becomes an account of shifting participation, not merely a final verdict about which voice owned which words.

This account does not deny that the technique can create emotional immediacy. Nor does every ambiguous phrase produce ethical insight; ambiguity may merely confuse. The point is that immediacy alone does not explain the form's distinctive power. Direct quotation can deliver a character's words, and explicit narration can report a character's thoughts. Free indirect discourse is distinctive because it superimposes perspectives without fully reconciling them. Its achievement lies less in abolishing narrative distance than in making distance fluctuate—and in teaching readers that closeness to a consciousness need not confer mastery over it.

According to the passage, what distinguishes free indirect discourse from both direct quotation and explicit narration?

  1. It superimposes perspectives without fully reconciling them.
  2. It eliminates all narrative distance.
  3. It always uses a character's exact spoken words.
  4. It shifts from third-person past tense into first-person present tense without an introductory reporting clause.
  5. It prevents readers from making any judgment about a character.

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