The Fair Jilt

Style

The Narrator and Her Voice

In The Fair Jilt Behn portrays the narrator as their own character through asides containing biased descriptions. Through these asides and throughout the novel, the narrator responds to the events unfolding by both condemning and sympathizing with them. The narrator is distinguished by following a trend of adopting a level of anonymity and secrecy that mirrors the reality in which Aphra Behn was writing her, often perceived as, sordid secret histories. [9]This ambiguous spectator utilized by Behn serves the specific narrational purpose of delving into and exploring what happens in private and making public the secret interpersonal affairs of the characters.[9] The narrator also functions as Behn's voice by adding a distinctive commentary on conventions within fiction by specifically addressing passion. She follows the themes of other amatory fiction authors by neither disparaging or encouraging it. [10]Through employing rhetorical devices such as these, Behn stands out from other writers of her time while also harvesting a distinct influence and inspiration upon other authors such as Eliza Haywood.[10]


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