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Journal ArticleDOI

Prefaces to the Novel: Robinson Crusoe and Novelistic Form

John Frow
- Vol. 63, pp 96-106
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TLDR
In the early history of the novel, the novel frequently deploys paratextual material to orient generic expectations, and in particular to navigate the often complex relation between the real and the fictional.
Abstract
In its early history the novel frequently deploys paratextual material to orient generic expectations, and in particular to navigate the often complex relation between the real and the fictional. Defoe's prefaces to the three instalments of the story of Robinson Crusoe map out an increasingly tortured attempt to puzzle out the world-forming quality of the novel and thus to construct a kind of proto-theory of novelistic form. Seeking both to claim the historical truth of the narrative and to deal with the consequences of the fact that that claim is untrue, these paratextual materials seek to reconcile novelistic invention with the revealed religious truth that stands above it.

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References
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The origins of the English novel, 1600-1740

TL;DR: McKeon as discussed by the authors argues that the genesis of the English novel lies in the great upheavals of secularization and reform that transformed early modern Europe, and combines historical analysis and readings of extraordinarily diverse texts to reconceive the foundations of the dominant genre.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Origins of the English Novel

Michael McKeon
- 01 Aug 1984 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors of Factual Fictions focus on the profound categorial uncertainty that is evident in those authors whom posterity has agreed to call "novelists."
Book

Nobody's Story: The Vanishing Acts of Women Writers in the Marketplace, 1670-1820

TL;DR: A ground-breaking exploration of the careers of five influential women writers of the Restoration and eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries is presented in this article, where Gallagher explores the evolving connection between the development of the novel and the growing prestige of the female author.