27 pages • 54 minutes read
Isaac AsimovA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
The story is narrated in the third-person limited omniscient (or close third) point of view from the perspective of Margie, an 11-year-old girl. Asimov’s narrative style is a fitting choice given the story’s original publication in a children’s newspaper. The story’s narrator has limited omniscience, making Margie’s perspective inherently unreliable. Given the story’s themes about how technology fails to account for and support human subjectivity, this is also an appropriate choice on the author’s part. Margie’s point of view allows for an exploration of inherently complex questions from a child’s simple perspective, which again meets the story’s thematic reminder to consider the simplest human elements among the lofty, progressive goals of technological advancement. This point of view is crucial in showing how technology must be moderated to ensure that human needs for connection and socialization are still met despite the changes to education and society effected by these technological advancements.
By Isaac Asimov
Foundation
Foundation
Isaac Asimov
Foundation and Empire
Foundation and Empire
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I, Robot
I, Robot
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Nightfall
Nightfall
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Rain, Rain, Go Away
Rain, Rain, Go Away
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Robot Dreams
Robot Dreams
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Someday
Someday
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The Caves of Steel
The Caves of Steel
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The Gods Themselves
The Gods Themselves
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The Last Question
The Last Question
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The Ugly Little Boy
The Ugly Little Boy
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True Love
True Love
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