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Michael McKeon
The Origins of the
English Novel, 1600-1740
Fifteenth Anniversary Edition
Johns Hopkins
University Press, 1987; reissued, 2003
In this book, Professor
Michael McKeon combines historical analysis
and readings of extraordinarily diverse texts
to reconceive the foundations of the dominant
genre of the modern era. Challenging prevailing
theories that tie the origins of the novel to
the ascendancy of "realism" and
the "middle class," Professor McKeon
argues that this new genre arose in response
to the profound instability of literary and
social categories. Between 1600 and 1740, momentous
changes took place in European attitudes toward
truth in narrative and toward virtue in the
individual and the social order. The novel
emerged, he contends, as a cultural instrument
designed to engage the epistemological and
social crises of the age.
The Fifteenth Anniversary Edition of The
Origins of the English Novel features
a new introduction in which Professor McKeon
reflects on the considerable response and commentary
the book has attracted since its publication
by describing dialectical method and by applying
it to early modern notions of gender.
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