Epistolary Fiction in Europe, 1500-1850Thomas O. Beebee offers a history of epistolary fiction as a major phenomenon practiced across Europe from the Renaissance to the mid-nineteenth century. He shows how epistolary fiction appropriated the status and power the letter had already acquired, and goes on to explore a number of related discourses and themes, including the letter writing manual, self-referential aspects of the letter, news and travel reporting, the relationship between letters and gender, and historically-specific letter writing by eighteenth- and nineteenth-century authors including Austen, Balzac, and Dostoevsky. There is a bibliography of major European epistolary fiction to 1850. |
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Abelard artes Austen becomes Cartas cathection chapter characters Cicero citations in text Clarissa communication correspondence courtiers cultural d'Aubignac's daughter defamiliarization dialog dictaminis discourse Dostoevsky Dusch eighteenth century English Epistles epistolary fiction epistolary form epistolary novel example exchange female France French Friedrich Further citations gender genealogy genre German Gustave Gustave's Heloise Heroides Isabelle de Charrière Jean-Paul Marat Johann Karamzin Lady language letter-form letter-writing manual lettered woman lettre de cachet literary literature London lovers Madame male Marat Michel Foucault modern mother narrative narrator novelistic Pallavicino Paris passion Pepita Jiménez period plot political Préchac purloined purloined letters readers Redgauntlet Renaissance Rétif's Revolution rhetoric Richardson Roger Duchêne Roman Ruth Perry Sade Samuel Richardson Sappho sentimental social society Spain Spanish Stägemann story style theme tion tradition trans translation University Press Valera Venice vols Werther women writing written