Book contents
- The Letters in the Story
- The Letters in the Story
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Preface: “To the Reader”
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction The Letters in the Story
- Chapter 1 Framing Narratives and the Hermeneutics of Suspicion
- Chapter 2 Letters and Empirical Evidence
- Chapter 3 Cultural Expectations and Encapsulating Letters
- Chapter 4 Epistolary Peripeteiae
- Chapter 5 Hermeneutics of Perspective
- Notes
- Index
Introduction - The Letters in the Story
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 November 2021
- The Letters in the Story
- The Letters in the Story
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Preface: “To the Reader”
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction The Letters in the Story
- Chapter 1 Framing Narratives and the Hermeneutics of Suspicion
- Chapter 2 Letters and Empirical Evidence
- Chapter 3 Cultural Expectations and Encapsulating Letters
- Chapter 4 Epistolary Peripeteiae
- Chapter 5 Hermeneutics of Perspective
- Notes
- Index
Summary
William Jones observed in 1780 that “compositions are like machines, where one part depends upon another: the art is to use method as builders do a scaffold, which is to be taken away when the work is finished; or as good workmen, who conceal the joints in their work, so it may look smooth and pleasant to the eye, as if it were all made of one piece.”1 As he noted, relations between parts of a composition are not necessarily obvious because, in good writing, the method of construction is artfully concealed. The same may be said of the contemporary thinking on which a method of construction draws and upon which it rests. This chapter therefore offers an overview of the scaffolding. It addresses the formal conventions and the ideas that good narrative-epistolary builders used their joints to connect during the period book-ended by Trollope and Behn, and concludes by discussing some key continuities and changes during this extended period in writers’ treatment of history, narrative, and letters.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Letters in the StoryNarrative-Epistolary Fiction from Aphra Behn to the Victorians, pp. 1 - 36Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021