Congruently to a comedy show that represents the commercial fictions versus a documentary on history or scientific research that represents literary fiction. Kindred, however, projects a fascinating novel of part-time traveling, part-slave narrative, and love stories with both happy and unhappy endings. The most exotic part about Kindred that makes the novel a commercial fiction is the part-time traveling between the protagonist's life of 1976 and the adaptation to life of the early 18th century as an African American slave. As soon as the story starts after the prologue, the narrator also known as the protagonist, named Dana Franklin, “began to feel dizzy, nauseated” (Kindred,13) and every time she does, the surrounding area vanishes and she ends up in a different place. The dizziness and nausea foreshadows Mrs. Franklin is going in time, but every time she goes back in time it is because Mr. Rufus Weylin is in danger or need of assistance. Time traveling is a fictional action but it's specifically commercial fiction in Kindred because it's a way to grasp the reader's attention. The time traveling has no deep life lesson meaning within the novel but neither did being part-slave narrator. Kindred is a story that's been told by first person or narrative view so it's simply easier for the readers to understand what
Congruently to a comedy show that represents the commercial fictions versus a documentary on history or scientific research that represents literary fiction. Kindred, however, projects a fascinating novel of part-time traveling, part-slave narrative, and love stories with both happy and unhappy endings. The most exotic part about Kindred that makes the novel a commercial fiction is the part-time traveling between the protagonist's life of 1976 and the adaptation to life of the early 18th century as an African American slave. As soon as the story starts after the prologue, the narrator also known as the protagonist, named Dana Franklin, “began to feel dizzy, nauseated” (Kindred,13) and every time she does, the surrounding area vanishes and she ends up in a different place. The dizziness and nausea foreshadows Mrs. Franklin is going in time, but every time she goes back in time it is because Mr. Rufus Weylin is in danger or need of assistance. Time traveling is a fictional action but it's specifically commercial fiction in Kindred because it's a way to grasp the reader's attention. The time traveling has no deep life lesson meaning within the novel but neither did being part-slave narrator. Kindred is a story that's been told by first person or narrative view so it's simply easier for the readers to understand what