The
story of Daniel Orozco “Orientation” is a short story which focuses on the idea
of the orientation of a person on his first day at work. Orozco does not introduce
the narrator of the story, also, as the story continues it shows the life of
the employees and how they interact became the important part of the story. The
story is told in the first person voice. The narrator is talking to one
particular person; He refers to this character in the second person voice.
“This is your phone.” The narrator is talking directly to the new employee, the
main character.
The main character
never speaks. It is implied that dialogue exists. “That was a good question.
Feel free to ask questions.” The narrator has acknowledged that the listener
has asked a question. The reader never actually sees the question that the
listener asks, though. Instead, the narrator rephrases the listener’s question
and repeats it back to him. By having the narrator do this, Orozco makes the
listener less important. His/her dialogue is not even important enough to
include in the text and must be repeated by the narrator in order to be
included in the story. However, contradictory to the listener’s seemed
unimportance, the narrator urges the listener to ask more questions.
The description is the
only important part of the story. Orozco uses both a professional tone and a
dark, uncomfortable-feeling description to create a highly contrasting reality
between the work setting and each character’s personal life.
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