![]() ![]() The cookie is set by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin and is used to store whether or not user has consented to the use of cookies. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Performance". This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookies is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Necessary". The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Other. The cookie is set by GDPR cookie consent to record the user consent for the cookies in the category "Functional". The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Analytics". Initially defined by Russian psychologist Lev Vygotsky in the early 20th century, he believed that inner speech was a natural part of. These cookies ensure basic functionalities and security features of the website, anonymously. Whether you refer to your internal voice as your inner dialogue, self-talk, internal speech, or stream of consciousness, an internal monologue is the voice inside your head that you can hear when you think. Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. Check out Tanya’s absolute favorite artisan ‘must-haves’ that she’s discovered along her journey. Interior Monologue is excited to announce the launch of an e-commerce shop, which is now offered right here on the website. Since launching Interior Monologue, Tanya has been featured in, Architectural Digest, SiriusXM, Hamptons Magazine, named as one of the Hampton’s Most Stylish by the Daily Front Row, named an influencer to follow by, featured on The Style Scout, and The Flair Index as well as hosted events for NY Design Week, Christofle, One King’s Lane, Jeff Andrews Design and 41 Madison to name a few. Having traveled extensively, and lived all over the world – from NYC to London, Munich to Johannesburg – Tanya was inspired to turn her passion for digging up the best of the best into a platform for telling the stories and selling the wares of her most highly admired designers, makers and artisans. ![]() With a background as a Creative Director for high-end brands, Tanya knows luxury, but found that she was much more interested in looking past the luxury to find out what really makes something ‘the best,’ highlighting the craft and artistry in anything she sees. Just don't do this too often, or it will lose its force.Tanya Zaben launched Interior Monologue in New York City as a website devoted to culling through the masses and picking out the absolute best of the best in handcrafted and artisan made goods. For situations where you want to strongly associate a particular thought - especially the emotions and volition that goes with it - with a character, go direct. What indirect internal monologue lacks is a really strong connection to the character who originates the thought. Use direct internal monologue for emotional impact On the other hand an indirect form of internal monologue can span paragraphs because it weaves into the storyline better. To try and use them for long descriptions of a character's thoughts will require either over-using he/she thought and similar phrases or allow for the reader to get lost as to who is thinking. Use indirect internal monologue for longer thoughtsĭirect internal monologues in a third person point of view should be used only for short statements. This contributes to the popularity of the third person narrator. A third person omniscient or limited narrator can dive into heads (depending on which heads the narrator is allowed to dive into) with impunity. This contributes to it's rare use in storytelling. A second person point of view also wouldn't show direct thought, unless it purports to show the reader's thoughts. A first person plural point of view wouldn't necessarily ever get to direct thoughts of an individual, as it would be expressing what a group thinks. In the first person singular point of view you are always expressing the thoughts of your narrator and never directly expressing the thoughts of other characters (although your narrator may guess at them). When expressing a characters thoughts, some of how the expression is formulated will be based on point of view. We should be able to convey a thought to our readers without the extra punctuation in the form of italics. When we as writers start using punctuation like italics to do our work for us, it can tend (though this is not always the case) to cause us to be lazier with our words themselves. ![]() ![]() One thing I was taught as a writing student was to avoid italics for direct internal monologue, and simply let the "he thought" or "she thought" or other similar clues in the text alert the reader to the originator of the monologue. ![]()
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