Daniel Defoe: Ambition and InnovationIn this book, Paula Backscheider considers Daniel Defoe's entire canon as related, developing, and in close dynamic relationship to the literature of its time. In so doing, she revises our conception of the contexts of Defoe's work and reassesses his achievement and contribution as a writer. By restoring a literary context for modern criticism, Backscheider argues the intensity and integrity of Defoe's artistic ambitions, demonstrating that everything he wrote rests solidly upon extensive reading of books published in England, his understanding of the reading tastes of his contemporaries, and his engagement with the issues and events of his time. Defoe, the dedicated professional writer and innovator, emerges with a new wholeness, and certain of his novels assume new significance. Defoe's literary status continues to be debated and misunderstood. Even critical studies of the novel often begin with Richardson rather than Defoe. By moving from Defoe's poetry, pamphlets, and histories to the novels, Backscheider offers an argument for the thematic and stylistic coherency of his oeuvre and for a recognition of the dominant place he held in shaping the English novel. For example, Defoe deserves to be recognized as the true originator of the historical novel, for three of his fictions are deeply engaged with just those conceptual and technical issues common to all later historical fiction. And Roxana now appears as Defoe's deliberate attempt to enter the fastest growing market for fiction—that for women readers. What have been powerfully significant for the history of the novel, then, are the very characteristics of his writing that have been held against his literary stature: its contemporaneity, its mixed and untidy form, its formal realism, its concentration on the life of an individual, and its probing of the individual's psychological interaction with the empirical world, making that world representative even as it is referential. It is exactly these characteristics most original, prominent, and subsequently imitated in Defoe's fiction that define the form we call "novel." |
From inside the book
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... Jure Divino (1706), which was soon published as a chapbook, and Caledonia (1706) appeared as a lavish volume supported by the Edinburgh Town Council and most of the important Scots of Defoe's time. As Frank Ellis has pointed out ...
... Jure Divino, Caledonia, and A Scots Poem, more than four thousand lines of verse. After 1706 his poems tended to be short occasional poems and lampoons.” The drudgery, especially of Jure Divino, was out of proportion to the reward ...
... jure divino” derives from the will of the people who choose their monarch and submit to his or her rule. “Justest Title, viz. the Revolution, and Parliamentary Settlement, from which, whoever reigns in England, has without a doubt, a ...
... Jure Divino very carefully,” he never achieves the concentration, compression, control, and power of poems like Rochester's A Satyr against Reason and Mankind or the “extensive overview” of poems like Johnson's Vanity of Human Wishes ...
... Jure Divino, unless one is given to reading an extremely radical opinion here. The limitation of the poem springs, I believe, from a fact of Defoe's entire artistic life; he was engaged with the topical rather than with the abstract. He ...
Contents
3 | |
12 | |
42 | |
4 THE HISTORIES | 70 |
5 THE HISTORICAL NOVELS | 120 |
6 CRIME AND ADVENTURE | 152 |
7 ROXANA | 182 |
8 MELTED DOWN FILLED WITH WONDERS | 215 |
NOTES | 241 |
BIBLIOGRAPHY | 267 |
INDEX | 289 |