Contents Acknowledgments List of Illustrations Introduction Chapter 1: Defoe as an Innovator of Fictional Form Chapter 2: Picturing the Thing Itself, or Not: Defoe, Painting, Prose Fiction, and the Arts of Describing Chapter 3: The Unmentionable and the Ineffable in Defoe's Fiction Chapter 4: Novel or Fictional Memoir: The Scandalous Publication of Robinson Crusoe Chapter 5: Meatless Fridays: CAnnibalism as Theme and Metaphor in Robinson Crusoe Chapter 6: Edenic Desires: Robinson Crusoe, The Robinsonade, and Utopian Forms Chapter 7: Strangely Surpriz'd by Robinson Crusoe: A Response to David Fishelov's "Robinson Crusoe, 'The Other,' and the Poetics of Surprise" Chapter 8: "Looking with Wonder Upon the Sea" : Defoe's Maritime Fictions, Robinson Crusoe, and "The Curious Age We Live in" Chapter 9: The Cave and the Grotto: Imagined Interiors and Realist Form in Robinson Crusoe Chapter 10: "The SUme of Humane Misery?": Ambiguities of Exile in Defoe's Fiction Chapter 11: Ideological Tendencies in Three Crusoe Narratives by British Novelists during the Period following the French Revolution: Charles Dibdin's Hannah Hewit, The Demale Crusoe, Maria Edgeworth's Forester, and Frances Burney's The Wanderer Afterword Bibliography About the Author