2007-08 BM1: Session 5

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Back to 2007-08 BM1 Introduction to the Critical and Scholarly Discussion of Literature, Part 1

Argument 5: The "Rise of the Novel" has been twice re-written over the past 100 years

  • The rise of the novel was originally - from the 16th into the 18th century - understood as the rise of realistic shorter stories (today called "novellas") defeating the rivaling romances
  • Novels - such as Cervantes' Novelas exemplares (1613) - were supposed to
  • teach through good and bad examples of what men and women did in peculiar ("novel", i.e. new) situations
  • entertain with their rapidly evolving plots of intrigues (i.e. secret plans),
  • be written in plain and modern language,
  • end in a point - a surprising turn of the events which the story teller could be expected to use for a more or less serious moral conclusion
  • Romances - such as the Amadis which had driven Cervantes' Don Quixote into a comical heroism - were supposed to
  • be long epic works
  • delight with a language full of lofty expressions,
  • be constructed as in successions of adventures,
  • celebrate the deeds of great heroes,
  • inspire an emulation of the hero's spirit.
  • The "rise of the novel" as defined in 1957 by Ian Watt in his book of the same title
  • turned French fictional works of the 17th century into original production of "romances",
  • claimed the new romances written by Defoe and his followers to be the first real "modern novels".
  • Research of the last two decades has detected a production of "novels" written before Defoe. Authors from Aphra Behn to Eliza Haywood have become "mothers of the English novel" in this development.