Illeism
Illeism is the act of referring to oneself in the third person instead of first person. It is sometimes used in literature as a stylistic device. In real-life usage, illeism can reflect a number of different stylistic intentions or involuntary circumstances.
In literature
Early literature such as Julius Caesar's Commentarii de Bello Gallico or Xenophon's Anabasis, both ostensibly non-fictional accounts of wars led by their authors, used illeism to impart an air of objective impartiality, which included justifications of the author's actions. In this way personal bias is presented, albeit dishonestly, as objectivity.Illeism can also be used in literature to provide a twist, wherein the identity of the narrator as the main character is hidden from the reader until later in the story ; the use of third person implies external observation. A similar use is when the author injects himself into his own third person narrative story as a character, such as Charlie Kaufman in Adaptation, Douglas Coupland in JPod, and Clive Cussler's novels, beginning with Dragon.
It can also be used as a device to illustrate the feeling of "being outside one's body and watching things happen", a psychological disconnect resulting from dissonance either from trauma such as childhood physical or sexual abuse, or from past outbursts that cannot be reconciled with the individual's own self-image. The same kind of objective distance can be employed for other purposes. Theologian Richard B. Hays writes an essay where he challenges earlier findings that he disagrees with: "These were the findings of one Richard B. Hays, and the newer essay treats the earlier work and earlier author at arms' length."
A common device in science fiction is for robots, computers, and other artificial life to refer to themselves in the third person, e.g. "This unit is malfunctioning" or "Number Five is alive", to suggest that these creatures are not truly self-aware, or that they separate their consciousness from their physical form.
Illeism may also be used to show idiocy, as with the character Mongo in Blazing Saddles, e.g. "Mongo like candy" and "Mongo only pawn in game of life"; though it may also show innocent simplicity, as it does with Harry Potter's Dobby the Elf.
In everyday speech
Illeism in everyday speech can have a variety of intentions depending on context. One common usage is to impart humility, a common practice in feudal societies and other societies where honorifics are important to observe, as well as in Master–Slave relationships. Recruits in the military, mostly United States Marine Corps recruits, are also often made to refer to themselves in the third person, such as "this recruit", in order to reduce the sense of individuality and enforce the idea of the group being more important than the self. The use of illeism in this context imparts a sense of lack of self, implying a diminished importance of the speaker in relation to the addressee or to a larger whole.Conversely, in different contexts, illeism can be used to reinforce self-promotion, as used to sometimes comic effect by Bob Dole throughout his political career. This was particularly made notable during the United States presidential election of 1996 and lampooned broadly in popular media for years afterwards. Deepanjana Pal of Firstpost noted that speaking in the third person "is a classic technique used by generations of Bollywood scriptwriters to establish a character's aristocracy, power and gravitas".
On the other hand, third person self-referral can be associated with self-irony and not taking oneself too seriously, as well as with eccentricity in general. Psychological studies show that thinking and speaking of oneself in the third person increases wisdom and has a positive effect on one's mental state because an individual who does so is more intellectually humble, more capable of empathy and understanding the perspectives of others, and is able to distance emotionally from one's own problems. Accordingly, in certain Eastern religions, like Hinduism or Buddhism, illeism is sometimes seen as a sign of enlightenment, since through it, an individual detaches his eternal self from his bodily form; in particular, Jnana yoga encourages its practitioners to refer to themselves in the third person. Known illeists of that sort include Swami Ramdas, Ma Yoga Laxmi, Anandamayi Ma, and Mata Amritanandamayi.
A number of celebrities, including Marilyn Monroe and Alice Cooper, referred to themselves in the third person to distance their public persona from their actual self.
Young children in Japan commonly refer to themselves by their own name. This is due to the Japanese way of speaking, in which referring to another in the third person is considered more polite than using any of the Japanese words for "you". As a Japanese child grows older they normally switch to using first person references. Japanese idols also may refer to themselves in the third person so to give off the feeling of childlike cuteness.
Notable illeists
Real people
Politics
- Julius Caesar's Commentarii de Bello Gallico present the author's exploits in the Gallic War in the third person.
- Henry Adams, historian, author and descendant of presidents John Adams and John Quincy Adams, throughout his autobiography The Education of Henry Adams
- General Douglas MacArthur was known to refer to himself as "MacArthur" in telling stories involving himself
- Charles de Gaulle
- Richard Nixon
- Bob Dole, during his United States presidential campaign in 1996
- Mikhail Gorbachev, Russian politician
- Paulo Maluf, Brazilian politician
- Bernie Sanders used third person in his presidential campaign in 2016.
- Donald Trump used the third person repeatedly during his presidency.
- Herman Cain, during his United States presidential campaign in 2012
- Narendra Modi, Prime Minister of India
- Anthony Garotinho, Brazilian politician
- Roy Kwong Chun-yu, District Councilor and legislator of Hong Kong
Sports
- After pitching Game 5 of the ALDS, Johnny Cueto gave a post game interview in the third person.
- Gregg Easterbrook, sports journalist, refers to himself as "TMQ" or "your columnist" in his weekly Tuesday Morning Quarterback columns.
- Zlatan Ibrahimović
- LeBron James made several references to himself in the third person during The Decision program on ESPN in 2010.
- Rickey Henderson occasionally referred to himself as "Rickey".
- Karl Malone
- Diego Maradona
- Lothar Matthäus is quoted with the phrase: "A Lothar Matthäus does not let himself be beaten by his body. A Lothar Matthäus decides on his fate himself."
- Cam Newton, NFL quarterback, referred to himself in third person during his press conference at the NFL Combine in 2011.
- Pelé
Entertainment
- Alice Cooper
- Flavor Flav
- Dwayne Johnson referenced himself in the third person as The Rock during his pro wrestling career, particularly with the catchphrases "The Rock says" and "Do you smell what The Rock is cookin'?" and uses third person pronouns to refer to himself.
- Gina Lollobrigida
- Hedy Lamarr
- Jean Harlow
- Marilyn Monroe
- Lila Morillo
- Mr. T; illeism became one of his trademarks in the 1980s.
Religion and spirituality
- Anandamayi Ma
- Mata Amritanandamayi
- Swami Ramdas
- Rama Tirtha
- Ma Yoga Laxmi, the secretary of Osho
- Jesus Christ is found referring to Himself as "Jesus", as in John 17:1–3.
Other
- Salvador Dalí in his interview with Mike Wallace, also known as The Mike Wallace Interview, on April 19, 1958.
- Norman Mailer's non-fiction work, The Fight, refers to the author in the third person throughout The Fight, explaining why he has chosen to do so at the beginning of the book.
- David Gries often refers to himself as "gries" when lecturing at Cornell University or interacting with students on Piazza.
- Judith Martin in her etiquette newspaper column "Miss Manners."
Fictional characters
Books
- Major Bagstock, the apoplectic retired Indian army officer from Charles Dickens' Dombey and Son refers to himself solely as Joseph, Old Joe, Joey B, Bagstock, Josh, J.B., Anthony Bagstock, and other variants of his own name.
- Captain Hook in J. M. Barrie's Peter Pan and Wendy : "'Better for Hook,' he cried, 'if he had had less ambition!' It was in his darkest hours only that he referred to himself in the third person."
- Gollum from The Lord of the Rings spoke in an idiosyncratic manner, often referring to himself in the third person, and frequently talked to himself—"through having no one else to speak to", as Tolkien put it in The Hobbit.
- Charlie from the acclaimed novel Flowers for Algernon speaks in third person in the "being outside one's body and watching things happen" manner in his flashbacks to his abusive and troubled childhood suffering from phenylketonuria.
- Boday, a quirky female artist from Jack Chalker's Changewinds trilogy.
- Y. T., a teenage girl from Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson.
- Bast the Wood Elf from The Council Wars series by John Ringo.
- The healer and wisewoman Magda Digby from the Owen Archer series by Candace Robb.
- Jaqen H'ghar, an assassin of the Faceless Men in the fantasy suite A Song of Ice and Fire, consistently refers to himself and sometimes the person he is addressing in third person.
- Dobby the Elf in the Harry Potter series.
- Ramona, the housekeeper and mentor in Silver Ravenwolf's Witches Chillers series.
- The old man Nakata from Haruki Murakami's Kafka on the Shore.
Comics
- Doctor Doom is known for more often than not referring to himself as "Doom" instead of "me" or "I".
- The Hulk uses illeism while saying his iconic "Hulk smash!" or variations thereof.
- Mantis almost always refers to herself as "Mantis", "she", and "this one"; this has to do with her upbringing at the Temple of the Priests of Pama, an alien pacifistic sect heavily inspired by real-life Eastern religious movements.
Television
- The cook Birdie from The Great Gildersleeve
- Elmo from Sesame Street, whose speech is intended to mimic the speech of preschoolers.
- Brian "Bomber" Busbridge, played by Pat Roach, in Auf Wiedersehen, Pet
- Hercule Poirot, in the contemporary television adaptation Agatha Christie's Poirot
- Jimmy from the episode "The Jimmy" of Seinfeld, whose usage leads to confusion about his identity. The usage rubs off on George Costanza, who exclaims "George is getting upset!"
- Zathras, a recurring alien character in the science fiction TV series Babylon 5
- Joey Tribbiani, a character in the NBC sitcom Friends, refers to himself in third person in an episode.
- Bob, played by Saverio Guerra, in Becker
- Stick-up man Omar Little from The Wire. Examples include "Omar don't scare" and "Omar listening".
- Eddie Alvarez from The Unusuals
- In the iCarly episode "iRocked the Vote", Carly, Sam and Freddie make a music video for singer Wade Collins, who is bitter about how the gang's web show caused him to lose the competition singing show America Sings . Wade exhibits arrogant and egotistical behavior frequently throughout the episode, including announcing "Wade Collins is leaving!" on his way out of Carly's apartment in one scene.
- Kenny Powers, from the television show Eastbound & Down
- George Remus, a recurring character played by Glenn Fleshler, in Boardwalk Empire
- The Great and Powerful Trixie from ' and '
- Lavon Hayes, the mayor from Hart of Dixie.
- Terry from Brooklyn Nine-Nine'' often refers to himself, for example "Terry loves yogurt".
Film
- Mr. Miyagi from The Karate Kid sometimes refers to himself as "Miyagi".
- Magua from The Last of the Mohicans
- Dwight, from Fast & Furious
- Francesco Bernoulli, from Cars 2
Manga and anime
- Sayuri Kurata from Kanon speaks this way in order to separate herself from her past treatment of her little brother, which she regrets.
- Megumi Noda, aka Nodame, the title character from Nodame Cantabile
- Ryūgū Rena from Higurashi When They Cry refers to herself in the third person when speaking to others, but oddly reverts to the first person when speaking to herself.
- Asami Nakaoka from Highschool of the Dead habitually refers to herself in third person
- Rika Shiguma from Haganai
- PallaPalla, from Sailor Moon
- Sesshomaru, from InuYasha
- Hana-chan, from Ojamajo Doremi, refers to herself in the third person, even saying "chan" along with her name.
- Candice from Pokémon. This is actually a translation error, as referring to oneself by name instead of pronoun is seen as "feminine" in the Japanese language, and is fairly common.
- Ed from Cowboy Bebop.
- Subaru Kujo, a gender-ambiguous character from
- Alien Guts, from Ultra Seven
- Yuiko Hawatari from Loveless, until she is taught to use the first person.
- Misa Amane from Death Note occasionally calls herself "Misa-Misa".
- Mayuri Shiina from Steins;Gate sometimes refers to herself as "Mayushii".
- Rena Ryuguu from Higurashi no Naku Koro ni, partly to stop people from using her real name.
- Juvia Lockser from Fairy Tail
- Asuza Shiratori, from Ranma, does this as a way to reinforce a "cute" stereotype.
Cartoons
- In Cartoon Network's Chowder, Chestnut refers to himself in person while naming everyday objects as other things.
- Ice Bear, one of three protagonists of We Bare Bears, speaks in third person, referring to himself with his own name.
- Tad Strange, in Gravity Falls, refers to himself in the third person in "Weirdmageddon 3: Take Back the Falls".
- Duffman, Gil, Groundskeeper Willie and Disco Stu from The Simpsons
- Scruffy the janitor in Futurama
- Foxxy Love of the animated series Drawn Together frequently refers to herself in the third person.
- George of George of the Jungle refers to himself in the third person due to his poor knowledge of English.
- Rolf from Ed, Edd n Eddy, perhaps due to a lack of English knowledge.
- from ', an American animated children's cartoon, refers to herself in the third person on multiple occasions.
- Zeg, a character from Blaze and the Monster Machines
- Hesh, a character from Sealab 2021
- Cerebus the Aardvark
- The Flea from Mucha Lucha.
- I.R. Baboon, from I Am Weasel
- Grimlock in the various incarnations of Transformers
- Rath, a transformation of Ben Tennyson from the ' and ' series often refers to himself in the third person, but not all the time.
- Jocktopus, from the children's television series, Fish Hooks
- Trixie, from '
- Waspinator, from Beast Wars, always refers to himself in the third person.
- Aku, the main villain of Cartoon Network's Samurai Jack animated series by Genndy Tartakovsky, frequently referred to himself in the third person.
- Robotboy refers to himself in the third person.
- Atchan from Hi Hi Puffy AmiYumi consistently refers to himself in the third person.
- Coldygury from Noonbory and the Super Seven
- Alfe from The Problem Solverz
- The Boulder, an earthbender in
- Stitch, the main protagonist in Disney's Lilo & Stitch franchise, often refers to himself in the third person when speaking English. However, in his original film, he only referred to himself in the third-person twice in the same scene.
Video games
- Ibuki Mioda in the Japanese version of
- Gonta Gokuhara in
- Angie Yonaga and Tenko Chabashira in the Japanese version of