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A Story of a Madman or a Paranoid Murderer

Good Essays

A Story of a Madman or a Paranoid Murderer? Often referred to as the “architect of the modern short story,” Edgar Allen Poe paints a vivid picture of a seemingly insane man murdering his elderly roommate in the short story, “The Tell-Tale Heart” (“Biography”). It is a great example of Poe’s style, with the major themes being insanity, paranoia, and murder. “The Tell-Tale Heart” is a short story written with the intent of focusing on the psyche of the main character. Since it is told from a first-person point of view, the audience is able to see what the protagonist is thinking and how his plan of this murder develops (“Biography”). This story might just seem like a tale of insanity, guilt, and murder, but upon further examination, it is a tale of moral deficiency, superhuman ability, paranoia, and ironic dissemblance.
In “The Tell-Tale Heart”, Poe’s use of the unreliable narrator is very well executed, because the lack of certain details adds to the suspense of this grim story. The reader is able to focus on the raw details of the murderous plot and the events that follow, in addition by leaving out certain details, it leads to some interesting questions. Who is the narrator’s audience that he is confessing the details of his crime to? What is the disease that he speaks of in the beginning? Is guilt the main reason for his confession at the end of the story? Perhaps the most obvious question raised after reading “The Tell Tale Heart,” is whether the main character actually

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