Epistolary Novel
Epistolary Meaning
The word epistolary is derived from the Latin ‘epistola’ which means a
letter. The word epistle is an ancient term used to mean a letter.
Epistolary Novel Definition
An epistolary novel is a
novel whose story is told through a series of letters. Benét's Reader's Encyclopedia defines the term and
explains that ‘the form was first popularized by the 18th century novels Pamela and Clarissa Harlowe by Samuel Richardson.' Some definitions of
the form include diary entries and other documents. While to some scholars an
epistolary novel is a novel written as a series of documents. The usual form of
an epistolary novel is letters, although diary entries, newspaper clippings and
other documents are sometimes used. Recently, electronic “documents" such
as recordings and radio, blogs, and e-mails have also come into use.
Epistolary Novel Features
In such novels which are otherwise
told in third person, letters allow the reader to hear the characters' voices
more intimately. They also give an impression of immediacy and authenticity.
Unlike works of the 18th century, contemporary novels rarely rely solely on
letters to tell a story.
An epistolary novel is also called a novel of letters,
because the narration takes place in the form of letters, possibly journal
entries and occasionally newspaper reports. An epistle is an archaic term for a
letter. The epistolary novel is an interesting literary technique, because it
allows a writer to include multiple narrators in his or her story. This means
the story can be told and interpreted from numerous viewpoints.
The first true epistolary novel was the 17th century work, Love Letters Between A Nobleman and His
Sister penned by Aphra Behn. Unlike many novels to follow, several
volumes of the work also include the voice of a narrator, who ties together
letters and comments on all of the characters. This aspect would disappear in
later works when the epistolary novel became popular in the 18th century.
Of these 18th century works, the most famous epistolary novels were
those of Samuel Richardson. Both his
novels Pamela and Clarissa were novels of letters. The French novelist Pierre
Ambroise François Choderlos de Laclos wrote one of today's most recognizable
epistolary novels Les Liaisons
Dangereuses (Dangerous Liasons), which has been the inspiration for
modern plays and two popular films, Dangerous Liasons and Valmont.
Epistolary Novel Historical Background
The birth and development of the epistolary novel is based on two theories. The first
theory claims that the genre originated from novels with inserted letters, in
which the portion containing the third person narrative in between the letters
was gradually reduced. The second theory claims that the epistolary novel arose from miscellanies of letters and poetry:
some of the letters were tied together into a (mostly amorous) plot. Both
claims have some validity.
The first truly epistolary novel, The Spanish Prison of Love
(Cárcel de amor) (c. 1485) by Diego de San Pedro, belongs to a tradition of
novels in which a large number of inserted letters already dominated the
narrative.
The founder of the epistolary novel
in English is regarded by many to be James
Howell (1594-1666) with "Familiar Letters" who writes of prison,
foreign adventure and the love of women,
The first novel to expose the complex
play that the genre allows was Aphra Behn's Love Letters Between a Nobleman and His Sister (1684), which
appeared in three volumes in 1684, 1685, and 1687. The novel shows the genre's
results of changing perspectives: individual points were presented by the
individual characters, and the central voice of the author and moral evaluation
disappeared.
The epistolary novel as a genre became popular in the 18th century in the works of Samuel
Richardson, with his immensely successful novels Pamela (1740) and Clarissa
(1749). In France, there was Lettres
Persanes (1721) by Montesquieu, followed by Julie, ou la nouvelle Héloise (1761) by Jean-Jacques
Rousseau, and Laclos’ Les Liaisons
dangereuses (1782), which used the epistolary form to great dramatic
effect, because the sequence of events was not always related directly or
explicitly.
In Germany, there was Johann Wolfgang
von Goethe's Die Leiden des jungen
Werthers (1774) (The Sorrows of Young Werther) and Friedrich
Hölderlin's Hyperion. The
first North American novel, The
History of Emily Montague (1769) by Frances Brooke was written in
epistolary form.
In the 18th century, the epistolary form was subject to much
ridicule, resulting in a number of savage burlesques. The most notable example
of these was Henry Fielding's Shamela
(1741), written as a parody of Pamela.
In Shamela, the female
narrator can be found wielding a pen and writing her diary entries under the
most dramatic and unlikely of circumstances. In 18th century, Jane Austen tried
her hand at the epistolary in juvenile writings and her novella Lady Susan, she abandoned this
structure for her later work. It is thought that her lost novel "First Impressions" which was
redrafted to become Pride and
Prejudice, may have been epistolary. Pride and Prejudice contains an unusual number of letters
quoted in full and some play a critical role in the plot.
Best Epistolary Novels
In nineteenth-century novels and
especially in Honoré de Balzac's novel Letters
of Tivo Brides, in which two women who became friends during their
education at a convent correspond over a 17 year period, exchanging letters
describing their lives. Mary Shelley
employs the epistolary form in her novel Frankenstein
(1818). Shelley uses the letters as one of a variety of framing devices, as the
story is presented through the letters of a sea captain and scientific explorer
attempting to reach the North Pole who encounters Victor Frankenstein and
records the dying man's narrative and confessions.
In the late 19th century, Bram Stoker released one of the most
widely recognized and successful novels in the epistolary form to date, Dracula.
Printed in 1897, the novel is compiled entirely of letters, diary entries, news
clippings, telegrams, doctor's notes, ship's logs, and the like, which Stoker
adroitly employs to balance believability and dramatic tension.
Types of Epistolary Novels
There are three types of epistolary novels:
1.monologic (giving the letters of
only one character, like Letters of a Portuguese Nun),
2.dialogic (giving the letters of two
characters, like Mme Marie Jeanne Riccoboni's Letters of Fanni Butlerd (1757),
and
3.polylogic (with three or more
letter-writing characters, such as in Bram Stoker's Dracula). In addition, a
crucial element in polylogic epistolary novels like Clarissa and Dangerous
Liaisons is the dramatic device of discrepant awareness': the simultaneous but
separate correspondences of the heroines and the villains creating dramatic
tension.
A few More Examples of Epistolary Novels
Fyodor Dostoevsky's first novel, Poor Folk
(1846) was a series of letters between two friends, struggling to cope with
their impoverished circumstances and life in pre-revolution Russia.
The
Tenant of Wildfell Hall (1848) by Anne
Brontë is written in the form of letter from the narrator to his friend
with the main heroine's diary inside it.
The
Moonstone (1868) by Wilkie
Collins uses a collection of various documents to construct a detective
novel in English.
Bram Stoker's Dracula (1897) uses not only letters and diaries, but also dictation
cylinders and newspaper accounts. While the novel draws on the epistolary form,
by the end of the story it reduces it, along with other media, to a monstrous
"mass of typewriting"
Jean Webster's Daddy-Long-Legs (1912)
S. Lewis used the epistolary form for
The Screwtape Letters
Saul Bellow's
novel Herzog (1964) is
largely written in letter format. These are both real and imagined letters,
written by the protagonist Moses E. Herzog to family members, friends and
famous figures.
Stephen King's
novel Carrie (1974) is
written in an epistolary structure,
through newspaper clippings, magazine articles letters, and excerpts from
books.
The Fan (1977) by Bob Randall is a thriller in epistolary form.
Alice Walker employed the epistolary
form in The Color Purple
(1982). The 1985 film adaptation echoed the form by incorporating into the
script some of the novel's letters, which the actors spoke as monologues.
John Updike's S. (1988) is an
epistolary novel consisting of the Heroin's letters and transcribed audio
recordings.
Richard B. Wright's Clara Callan (2001) uses letters and journal entries to weave the story of a middle-aged woman in the 1930s.
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