The Lives of the Novel: A History

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Princeton University Press, Jun 30, 2015 - Literary Criticism - 360 pages

A bold new account of the history of the novel, from ancient Greece to the present

This is a bold and original original history of the novel from ancient Greece to the vibrant world of contemporary fiction. In this wide-ranging survey, Thomas Pavel argues that the driving force behind the novel's evolution has been a rivalry between stories that idealize human behavior and those that ridicule and condemn it. Impelled by this conflict, the novel moved from depicting strong souls to sensitive hearts and, finally, to enigmatic psyches. Pavel analyzes more than a hundred novels from Europe, North and South America, Asia, and beyond, resulting in a provocative reinterpretation of its development.

According to Pavel, the earliest novels were implausible because their characters were either perfect or villainous. In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, novelists strove for greater credibility by describing the inner lives of ideal characters in minute detail (as in Samuel Richardson's case), or by closely examining the historical and social environment (as Walter Scott and Balzac did). Yet the earlier rivalry continued: Henry Fielding held the line against idealism, defending the comic tradition with its flawed characters, while Charlotte Brontë and George Eliot offered a rejoinder to social realism with their idealized vision of strong, generous, and sensitive women. In the twentieth century, modernists like Proust and Joyce sought to move beyond this conflict and capture the enigmatic workings of the psyche.

Pavel concludes his compelling account by showing how the old tensions persist even within today's pluralism, as popular novels about heroes coexist with a wealth of other kinds of works, from satire to social and psychological realism.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
Strong Souls Degrees of Perfection
23
Helpless Souls Tricksters and Rascals
51
Interlude The Ideographic Method
72
The Pastoral
91
Don Quixote and the History of the Novel
107
The New Idealism
119
Resistance to New Idealism
135
Novels and Society
169
From Sensitive Hearts to Enigmatic Psyches
199
Syntheses High Points
226
PART FOUR The Art of Detachment
263
Loners in a Strange World
265
Envoi
297
Reading List
301
Debts
313

Romantic and Impossible
152
PART THREE The Roots of Greatness
167

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About the author (2015)

Thomas G. Pavel is Gordon J. Laing Distinguished Service Professor of French, Comparative Literature, and Social Thought at the University of Chicago. His books include Fictional Worlds and The Spell of Language.

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