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- Significant new interpretations of major novelists and their contemporaries, showing the development of English fiction across the centuries
- Shows the novel's contribution to ideas of Englishness and English national identity
- Links the development of the novel to national history and national mythology
- Foregrounds the 'novel of immigration' as the most innovative strand in fiction of the last 30 years
- Includes an extensive bibliography and short biographies of almost two hundred novelists
What is 'English' about the English novel, and how has the idea of the
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Produktbeschreibung
- Significant new interpretations of major novelists and their contemporaries, showing the development of English fiction across the centuries
- Shows the novel's contribution to ideas of Englishness and English national identity
- Links the development of the novel to national history and national mythology
- Foregrounds the 'novel of immigration' as the most innovative strand in fiction of the last 30 years
- Includes an extensive bibliography and short biographies of almost two hundred novelists
What is 'English' about the English novel, and how has the idea of the English nation been shaped by the writers of fiction? How do the novel's profound differences from poetry and drama affect its representation of national consciousness?

Nation and Novel sets out to answer these questions by tracing English prose fiction from its late medieval origins through its stories of rogues and criminals, family rebellions and suffering heroines, to the present-day novels of immigration. Major novelists from Daniel Defoe to the late twentieth century have drawn on national history and mythology in novels which have pitted Cavalier against Puritan, Tory against Whig, region against nation, and domesticity against empire. The novel is deeply concerned with the fate of the nation, but almost always at variance with official and ruling-class perspectives on English society.

Patrick Parrinder's groundbreaking new literary history outlines the English novel's distinctive, sometimes paradoxical, and often subversive view of national character and identity. This sophisticated yet accessible assessment of the relationship between fiction and nation will set the agenda for future research and debate.

Contents
- Introduction
- 1 The Novel and the Nation
- 2 Cavaliers, Puritans, and Rogues: English Fiction from 1485 to 1700
- 3 Cross-Grained Crusoe: Defoe and the Contradictions of Englishness
- 4 Histories of Rebellion: From 1688 to 1793
- 5 The Novel of Suffering: Richardson, Fielding, and Goldsmith
- 6 The Benevolent Robber: From Fielding to the 1790s
- 7 Romanitic Toryism: Scott, Disraeli, and Others
- 8 Tory Daughters and the Politics of Marriage: Jane Austen, Charlotte Brontë, and Elizabeth Gaskell
- 9 'Turn Again, Dick Whittington!': Dickens and the Fiction of the City
- 10 At Home and Abroad in Victorian and Edwardian Fiction: From Vanity Fair to The Secret Agent
- 11 Puritan and Provincial Englands: From Emily Brontë to D. H. Lawrence
- 12 From Forster to Orwell: The Novel of England's Destiny
- 13 From Kipling to Independence: Losing the Empire
- 14 Round Tables: Chivalry and the Twentieth-Century English Novel- Sequence
- 15 Inward Migrations: Multiculturalism, Anglicization, and Internal Exile
- Conclusion: On Englishness and the Twenty-First Century Novel
Autorenporträt
Patrick Parrinder, School of English and American Literature, University of Reading