- Mon Sep 13, 2021 2:13 pm
#90344
Hi Brian,
"Delimits" doesn't work here, for two reasons. First, because the author is concerned about authenticity in cases other than ones in which the editor delimits his or her role. So, the word "delimits" wouldn't cover the author's concerns about authenticity in autobiographies when the editor does NOT delimit their role. Second, because the author seems to recognize that while it doesn't fully solve the problem of authenticity, "delimiting" your role as an editor does help a little bit in resurrecting some level of authenticity. After all, the author says that when the editor delimits their role, that "undoubtedly may be regarded as more authentic and reflective of the narrator's thought in action than those edited works that flesh out a statement of facts in ways unaccounted for." Since the delimiting process "fixes up" authenticity a little bit (at least), it's not a great descriptor to capture the author's concerns about authenticity in a more general sense.
Don't overcomplicate things with the word "ostensible." The meaning of the word contains the suggestion of something not being true (the authorship not being true), thus it fits the idea of authorship not being authentic, something the author of the passage is concerned about when it comes to authenticity (since the first sentence says such ostensible authorship "inevitably raises concerns about authenticity"). That's enough to pick it, whether or not every reader of a work would draw those conclusions.
I hope this helps!
Jeremy Press
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant