The Origins of the English Novel, 1600-1740 15/e

JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9780801869594

Price:
Sale price$82.99
Stock:
Out of Stock - Available to backorder

By Michael McKeon
Imprint:
JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Pages:
560

Request Academic Copy

Button Actions

Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form

Description


Contents:



Acknowledgments

Introduction to the Fifteenth Anniversary Edition

Introduction: Dialectical Method in Literary History



PART I QUESTIONS OF TRUTH

Chapter One: The Destabilization of Generic Categories

Chapter Two: The Evidence of the Senses: Secularization and Epistemological Crisis

Chapter Three: Histories of the Individual



PART II QUESTIONS OF VIRTUE

Chapter Four: The Destabilization of Social Categories

Chapter Five: Absolutism and Capitalist Ideology: The Volatility of Reform

Chapter Six: Stories of Virtue



PART III THE DIALECTICAL CONSTITUTION OF THE NOVEL

Chapter Seven: Romance Transformations (I) : Cervantes and the Disenchantment of the World

Chapter Eight: Romance Transformations (II) : Bunyan and Literalization of Allegory

Chapter Nine: Parables of the Younger Son (I) : Defoe and the Naturalization of Desire

Chapter Ten: Parables of the Younger Son (II) : Swift and the Containment of Desire

Chapter Eleven: The Institutionalization of Conflict (I) : Richardson and the Domestication of Service

Chapter Twelve: The Institutionalization of Conflict (II) : Fielding and the Instrumentality of Belief



Conclusion

Notes

Index

""The last two decades have been turbulent ones for the study of the novel, and most of the waves have been created by Michael McKeon... The fifteenth anniversary edition... offers the opportunity to reflect on McKeon's extraordinary contribution to studies of the novel... Because the work is so careful and the thinking so precise, I find the story he tells just as compelling now as in the 1980s and, if anything, more satisfying in its comprehension of issues and weaving them into a coherent whole.""

You may also like

Recently viewed