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Cambridge University Press

The Letters in the Story : Narrative-Epistolary Fiction from Aphra Behn to the Victorians

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Product Code: 9781009001823
ISBN13: 9781009001823
Condition: New
$33.50
The long tradition of mixta-genera fiction, particularly favoured by women novelists, which combined fully-transcribed letters and third-person narrative has been largely overlooked in literary criticism. Working with recognized formal conventions and typical thematic concerns, Tavor Bannet demonstrates how narrative-epistolary novels opposed the real, situated, transactional and instrumental character of letters, with their multi-lateral relationships and temporally shifting readings, to merely documentary uses of letters in history and law. Analyzing issues of reading and misreading, knowledge and ignorance, communication and credulity, this study investigates how novelists adapted familiar romance plots centred on mysteries of identity to test the viability of empiricism's new culture of fact and challenge positivism's later all-pervading regime of truth. Close reading of narrative-epistolary novels by authors ranging from Aphra Behn and Charlotte Lennox to Frances Burney and Wilkie Collins tracks transgenerational debates, bringing to light both what Victorians took from their eighteenth-century forbears and what they changed.


Author: Eve Tavor Bannet
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication Date: Jul 11, 2024
Number of Pages: NA pages
Language: English
Binding: Paperback
ISBN-10: 1009001825
ISBN-13: 9781009001823

The Letters in the Story : Narrative-Epistolary Fiction from Aphra Behn to the Victorians

$33.50
 
The long tradition of mixta-genera fiction, particularly favoured by women novelists, which combined fully-transcribed letters and third-person narrative has been largely overlooked in literary criticism. Working with recognized formal conventions and typical thematic concerns, Tavor Bannet demonstrates how narrative-epistolary novels opposed the real, situated, transactional and instrumental character of letters, with their multi-lateral relationships and temporally shifting readings, to merely documentary uses of letters in history and law. Analyzing issues of reading and misreading, knowledge and ignorance, communication and credulity, this study investigates how novelists adapted familiar romance plots centred on mysteries of identity to test the viability of empiricism's new culture of fact and challenge positivism's later all-pervading regime of truth. Close reading of narrative-epistolary novels by authors ranging from Aphra Behn and Charlotte Lennox to Frances Burney and Wilkie Collins tracks transgenerational debates, bringing to light both what Victorians took from their eighteenth-century forbears and what they changed.


Author: Eve Tavor Bannet
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication Date: Jul 11, 2024
Number of Pages: NA pages
Language: English
Binding: Paperback
ISBN-10: 1009001825
ISBN-13: 9781009001823
 

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