The clearest example of metafiction is the story. A story with footnotes that comment on the author's process.
Many resources can be employed to make use of metafiction (a narrative technique in which the author constantly reminds the reader that he or she is reading a fictional work), and some of them include:
- Telling a story within a story
- Telling a story about a third person who's reading or writing a book
- And of course, telling a story and making use of footnotes to comment on it
In this way the reader is engaged and becomes a participant in the story, forcing himself to think about the nature of the narration and how much credibility exists in the stories he/she reads.
Answer:
B and D
ive had that question before
Answer:
D
Explanation:
This is a story from World War II era when Germans had started a Holocaust. A person named Max had been given shelter by Stefania in her apartment secretly.
The Call of the Wild was written by Jack London and published in 1903. Most of the novel takes place in the Yukon Territory, which is between Alaska and present-day Canada. The story takes place during the Klondike Gold Rush, shortly after gold was discovered in the Klondike in 1896.
(Sorry it's 2:00 AM right now where I live but that was all I was able to find in a short amount of time. Hope it helps you out and good luck!)
- Mike