- Amatory fiction
Amatory fiction is a genre of
British literature popular during the late 17th century and 18th century. Amatory fiction predates, and in some ways predicts, the invention of thenovel . Amatory fiction was written by women and for women. As its name implies, amatory fiction is preoccupied with sexual love and romance. It is an early predecessor of theromance novel . Indeed, many themes of the contemporary romance novel were first explored in amatory fiction.The three most prominent amatory fiction writers were
Eliza Haywood (who wrote "Love in Excess; Or, The Fatal Enquiry "),Delarivier Manley , andAphra Behn . Together, these writers were known as the "fair triumvirate," though their reputation for scandalous writing caused some to call them the "naughty triumvirate." [Toni O'Shaughnessy Bowers, "Sex, Lies, and Invisibility: Amatory Fiction from the Restoration to Mid-Century," "The Columbia History of the British Novel", Ed. John Richetti, Columbia UP, 1994, 51.]Themes of amatory fiction
Narrowly defined, amatory fiction is a formulaic genre which typically depicts an
innocent , trusting woman who is deceived by a self-serving, lustful man. For the women of amatory fiction,love typically ends in misery.Although amatory fiction has traditionally been excluded from "rise of the novel" narratives, recent scholarship concludes that these works are not merely precursors to the novel, but novels in their own right.
Authors of amatory fictions often detailed extramarital
affairs , which conveniently allowed them to avoid the complications ofproperty , which was a strong motivation formarriage when amatory fiction was popular.Some works of amatory fiction were considered amoral by contemporary standards, and allowed their characters to commit scandalous love affairs without being "punished" based on themes of
Christian , social, legal or other forms ofpoetic justice .Notes
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