Richardson's 'Clarissa' and the Eighteenth-Century Reader Keymer Paperback

Richardson's 'Clarissa' and the Eighteenth-Century Reader Keymer Paperback

Richardson's 'Clarissa' and the Eighteenth-Century ReaderAuthor(s): Tom Keymer\nFormat: Paperback\nPublisher: Cambridge University Press, United Kingdom\nImprint: Cambridge University Press\nISBN-13: 9780521604406, 978-0521604406\nSynopsis\nWritten as a collection of letters in which very different accounts of the action are unsupervised by sustained authorial comment, Richardson's novel Clarissa offers an extreme example of the capacity of narrative to give the reader final responsibility for resolving or construing meaning. It is paradoxical then that its author was a writer committed to avowedly didactic goals. Tom Keymer counters the tendency of recent critics to suggest that Clarissa's textual indeterminacy defeats these goals by arguing that Richardson pursues subtler and more generous means of educating his readers by making them 'if not Authors, Carvers' of the text. Discussing Richardson's use of the epistolary form throughout his career, Keymer goes on to focus in detail on.

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