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The Letters in the Story
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Table of Contents

Preface: 'To the reader'; Introduction: The letters in the story; 1. Framing narratives and the hermeneutics of suspicion; 2. Letters and empirical evidence; 3. Cultural expectations and encapsulating letters; 4. Epistolary Peripeteia; 5. Hermeneutics of perspective.

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First study of a long tradition of mixed-mode writing, largely favored by British women novelists, that combined fully-transcribed letters with third-person narrative.

About the Author

Eve Tavor Bannet is George Lynn Cross Professor Emeritus at the University of Oklahoma. Her monographs include Empire of Letters (Cambridge, 2005), Transatlantic Stories and the History of Reading (Cambridge, 2011), Eighteenth-Century Manners of Reading (Cambridge, 2017) and The Domestic Revolution (2000).

Reviews

'… I applaud Bannet's experimental reinvestigation of letters in fiction, which inaugurates a different, important way of reading them as purposefully bound to narrative.' Laura Rotunno, Review19

'Eve Tavor Bannet … tells two intertwined stories. One uncovers the unique mixed genre of 'narrative-epistolary fiction'; the other examines how 18th- and 19th-century narrative-epistolary fiction joined with romance and mystery genres to engage with empiricist and positivist thought … I applaud Bannet's experimental re-investigation of letters in fiction, which inaugurates a different, important way of reading them as purposefully bound to narrative.' Laura Rotunno, Review19

'This is a book that should be read and its insights pondered by everyone who teaches English fiction between Aphra Behn and Anthony Trollope … The Letters in the Story packs a huge amount of erudition and analytic acuity into a relatively small number of pages … a major contribution to our understanding of viewpoint and meaning in the pre-twentieth-century novel in English.' Robert D. Hume, The Eighteenth-Century Intelligencer

'Bannet's insightful interrogation of often-neglected as well as familiar works encourages their reappraisal, and her caution regarding overly trusting reading remains pertinent. … Recommended.' J. Rosenblum, Choice

'… breaks new scholarly ground in delineating a little-known novelistic tradition she terms “narrative-epistolary fiction” for the first time. … this important study shows how letters embedded in narratives are best understood as making meaning together collaboratively. In illuminating this point, Bannet brilliantly maps out the critical territory needed for new kinds of conversations about the relationship between the epistolary and the novel form, both in this period and beyond.' Crystal Biggin, Women's Writing

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