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Across his vast oeuvre, which includes books, pamphlets, and periodicals, Daniel Defoe commented on virtually every development and issue of his lifetime, a turbulent and transformative period in British and global history. This Handbook offers the most comprehensive overview available of his life, times, writings, and reception.
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Across his vast oeuvre, which includes books, pamphlets, and periodicals, Daniel Defoe commented on virtually every development and issue of his lifetime, a turbulent and transformative period in British and global history. This Handbook offers the most comprehensive overview available of his life, times, writings, and reception.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Oxford Handbooks
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 720
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. März 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 239mm x 183mm x 71mm
- Gewicht: 1406g
- ISBN-13: 9780198827177
- ISBN-10: 0198827172
- Artikelnr.: 69191193
- Oxford Handbooks
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 720
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. März 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 239mm x 183mm x 71mm
- Gewicht: 1406g
- ISBN-13: 9780198827177
- ISBN-10: 0198827172
- Artikelnr.: 69191193
Nicholas Seager is Professor of English Literature and Head of the School of Humanities at Keele University. He has published on literature of the long eighteenth century, including Bunyan, Swift, Defoe, Richardson, Johnson, Sterne, Goldsmith, and Austen. He is the editor of The Cambridge Edition of the Correspondence of Daniel Defoe (2022), and co-editor of The Afterlives of Eighteenth-Century Fiction (2015) and The Cambridge Companion to Gulliver's Travels (2023). He has recently completed an edition of Defoe's The Fortunate Mistress for Oxford World's Classics. J. A. Downie is Emeritus Professor of English at Goldsmiths, University of London, where he was Dean of the Faculty of Arts from 1991 to 1995 and Pro-Warden (Academic) from 1995 to 2002. His books include Robert Harley and the Press (1979), Jonathan Swift, Political Writer (1984), To Settle the Succession of the State: Literature and Politics, 1678-1750 (1994), and A Political Biography of Henry Fielding (2009). He edited two volumes in the Pickering Masters edition of The Works of Daniel Defoe. He also edited of The Oxford Handbook of the Eighteenth-Century Novel (2016).
* 1: Brian Cowan: Defoe's Life and Times
* Part I. Genres
* 2: Maximillian E. Novak: Defoe's Poetry
* 3: Geoffrey Sill: Defoe, Prose Fiction, and the Novel
* 4: Cynthia Wall: Defoe and Drama
* 5: Penny Pritchard: Dialogue and Didacticism: Defoe's Conduct and
Advice Literature
* 6: Jeffrey Hopes: The Great Polemicist: Defoe's Pamphlets and Tracts
* 7: Ashley Marshall: Defoe's Periodical Journalism
* 8: Paul Baines: Defoe and the Idea of Travel
* 9: Rebecca Bullard: Defoe as Historian
* 10: Marc Mierowsky: The Style of Defoe's Correspondence
* 11: Joseph Hone: Defoe and Satire
* Part II. Contexts
* 12: Pat Rogers: Defoe and the Book Trade
* 13: J. A. Downie: Daniel Defoe and the Social Structure of
Pre-Industrial England
* 14: Nicholas Seager: Defoe and Economics: Industry, Trade, and
Finance
* 15: Paula R. Backscheider: Gender, Sexuality, and the Status of Women
in Defoe's Writings
* 16: Liz Bellamy: Family and Domesticity in Defoe's Writings
* 17: David Walker: Defoe and Christianity
* 18: John Richetti: Defoe, Philosophy, and Religion
* 19: Christopher F. Loar: Defoe, Science, and Technology
* 20: D. W. Hayton: Defoe and Government: Propaganda and Principle
* 21: Katherine Ellison: Intelligence, Espionage, and the Ethics of
Surveillance in Defoe's Writings
* 22: Sharon Alker and Holly Faith Nelson: Defoe and War
* 23: Kate Loveman: Crime and the Law in Defoe's Works
* 24: Srividhya Swaminathan: Racial and National Identities in Defoe's
Writings
* 25: Lucinda Cole: Defoe and Ecology
* Part III. Places
* 26: Brean S. Hammond: Defoe and London
* 27: Adam Sills: Defoe and Britain
* 28: Andreas K. E. Mueller: Defoe's Europe: Allies and Enemies
* 29: Markman Ellis: Defoe and Colonialism
* 30: Robert Markley: Defoe and the Pacific
* 31: Rebekah Mitsein and Manushag N. Powell: Africa and the Levant in
Defoe's Writings
* Part IV. Afterlives
* 32: Nicholas Seager: The Celebrated Daniel De Foe: Publication
History, 1731-1945
* 33: Kit Kincade: Defoe's Critical Reception, 1731-1945
* 34: Benjamin F. Pauley: Attribution and the Defoe Canon
* 35: Rivka Swenson: Habits of Gender and Genre in Three Female
Robinsonades, 1767-1985
* 36: Robert Mayer: Defoe on Screen: Robinson Crusoe, The Red Turtle,
and Animal Rights
* Part I. Genres
* 2: Maximillian E. Novak: Defoe's Poetry
* 3: Geoffrey Sill: Defoe, Prose Fiction, and the Novel
* 4: Cynthia Wall: Defoe and Drama
* 5: Penny Pritchard: Dialogue and Didacticism: Defoe's Conduct and
Advice Literature
* 6: Jeffrey Hopes: The Great Polemicist: Defoe's Pamphlets and Tracts
* 7: Ashley Marshall: Defoe's Periodical Journalism
* 8: Paul Baines: Defoe and the Idea of Travel
* 9: Rebecca Bullard: Defoe as Historian
* 10: Marc Mierowsky: The Style of Defoe's Correspondence
* 11: Joseph Hone: Defoe and Satire
* Part II. Contexts
* 12: Pat Rogers: Defoe and the Book Trade
* 13: J. A. Downie: Daniel Defoe and the Social Structure of
Pre-Industrial England
* 14: Nicholas Seager: Defoe and Economics: Industry, Trade, and
Finance
* 15: Paula R. Backscheider: Gender, Sexuality, and the Status of Women
in Defoe's Writings
* 16: Liz Bellamy: Family and Domesticity in Defoe's Writings
* 17: David Walker: Defoe and Christianity
* 18: John Richetti: Defoe, Philosophy, and Religion
* 19: Christopher F. Loar: Defoe, Science, and Technology
* 20: D. W. Hayton: Defoe and Government: Propaganda and Principle
* 21: Katherine Ellison: Intelligence, Espionage, and the Ethics of
Surveillance in Defoe's Writings
* 22: Sharon Alker and Holly Faith Nelson: Defoe and War
* 23: Kate Loveman: Crime and the Law in Defoe's Works
* 24: Srividhya Swaminathan: Racial and National Identities in Defoe's
Writings
* 25: Lucinda Cole: Defoe and Ecology
* Part III. Places
* 26: Brean S. Hammond: Defoe and London
* 27: Adam Sills: Defoe and Britain
* 28: Andreas K. E. Mueller: Defoe's Europe: Allies and Enemies
* 29: Markman Ellis: Defoe and Colonialism
* 30: Robert Markley: Defoe and the Pacific
* 31: Rebekah Mitsein and Manushag N. Powell: Africa and the Levant in
Defoe's Writings
* Part IV. Afterlives
* 32: Nicholas Seager: The Celebrated Daniel De Foe: Publication
History, 1731-1945
* 33: Kit Kincade: Defoe's Critical Reception, 1731-1945
* 34: Benjamin F. Pauley: Attribution and the Defoe Canon
* 35: Rivka Swenson: Habits of Gender and Genre in Three Female
Robinsonades, 1767-1985
* 36: Robert Mayer: Defoe on Screen: Robinson Crusoe, The Red Turtle,
and Animal Rights
* 1: Brian Cowan: Defoe's Life and Times
* Part I. Genres
* 2: Maximillian E. Novak: Defoe's Poetry
* 3: Geoffrey Sill: Defoe, Prose Fiction, and the Novel
* 4: Cynthia Wall: Defoe and Drama
* 5: Penny Pritchard: Dialogue and Didacticism: Defoe's Conduct and
Advice Literature
* 6: Jeffrey Hopes: The Great Polemicist: Defoe's Pamphlets and Tracts
* 7: Ashley Marshall: Defoe's Periodical Journalism
* 8: Paul Baines: Defoe and the Idea of Travel
* 9: Rebecca Bullard: Defoe as Historian
* 10: Marc Mierowsky: The Style of Defoe's Correspondence
* 11: Joseph Hone: Defoe and Satire
* Part II. Contexts
* 12: Pat Rogers: Defoe and the Book Trade
* 13: J. A. Downie: Daniel Defoe and the Social Structure of
Pre-Industrial England
* 14: Nicholas Seager: Defoe and Economics: Industry, Trade, and
Finance
* 15: Paula R. Backscheider: Gender, Sexuality, and the Status of Women
in Defoe's Writings
* 16: Liz Bellamy: Family and Domesticity in Defoe's Writings
* 17: David Walker: Defoe and Christianity
* 18: John Richetti: Defoe, Philosophy, and Religion
* 19: Christopher F. Loar: Defoe, Science, and Technology
* 20: D. W. Hayton: Defoe and Government: Propaganda and Principle
* 21: Katherine Ellison: Intelligence, Espionage, and the Ethics of
Surveillance in Defoe's Writings
* 22: Sharon Alker and Holly Faith Nelson: Defoe and War
* 23: Kate Loveman: Crime and the Law in Defoe's Works
* 24: Srividhya Swaminathan: Racial and National Identities in Defoe's
Writings
* 25: Lucinda Cole: Defoe and Ecology
* Part III. Places
* 26: Brean S. Hammond: Defoe and London
* 27: Adam Sills: Defoe and Britain
* 28: Andreas K. E. Mueller: Defoe's Europe: Allies and Enemies
* 29: Markman Ellis: Defoe and Colonialism
* 30: Robert Markley: Defoe and the Pacific
* 31: Rebekah Mitsein and Manushag N. Powell: Africa and the Levant in
Defoe's Writings
* Part IV. Afterlives
* 32: Nicholas Seager: The Celebrated Daniel De Foe: Publication
History, 1731-1945
* 33: Kit Kincade: Defoe's Critical Reception, 1731-1945
* 34: Benjamin F. Pauley: Attribution and the Defoe Canon
* 35: Rivka Swenson: Habits of Gender and Genre in Three Female
Robinsonades, 1767-1985
* 36: Robert Mayer: Defoe on Screen: Robinson Crusoe, The Red Turtle,
and Animal Rights
* Part I. Genres
* 2: Maximillian E. Novak: Defoe's Poetry
* 3: Geoffrey Sill: Defoe, Prose Fiction, and the Novel
* 4: Cynthia Wall: Defoe and Drama
* 5: Penny Pritchard: Dialogue and Didacticism: Defoe's Conduct and
Advice Literature
* 6: Jeffrey Hopes: The Great Polemicist: Defoe's Pamphlets and Tracts
* 7: Ashley Marshall: Defoe's Periodical Journalism
* 8: Paul Baines: Defoe and the Idea of Travel
* 9: Rebecca Bullard: Defoe as Historian
* 10: Marc Mierowsky: The Style of Defoe's Correspondence
* 11: Joseph Hone: Defoe and Satire
* Part II. Contexts
* 12: Pat Rogers: Defoe and the Book Trade
* 13: J. A. Downie: Daniel Defoe and the Social Structure of
Pre-Industrial England
* 14: Nicholas Seager: Defoe and Economics: Industry, Trade, and
Finance
* 15: Paula R. Backscheider: Gender, Sexuality, and the Status of Women
in Defoe's Writings
* 16: Liz Bellamy: Family and Domesticity in Defoe's Writings
* 17: David Walker: Defoe and Christianity
* 18: John Richetti: Defoe, Philosophy, and Religion
* 19: Christopher F. Loar: Defoe, Science, and Technology
* 20: D. W. Hayton: Defoe and Government: Propaganda and Principle
* 21: Katherine Ellison: Intelligence, Espionage, and the Ethics of
Surveillance in Defoe's Writings
* 22: Sharon Alker and Holly Faith Nelson: Defoe and War
* 23: Kate Loveman: Crime and the Law in Defoe's Works
* 24: Srividhya Swaminathan: Racial and National Identities in Defoe's
Writings
* 25: Lucinda Cole: Defoe and Ecology
* Part III. Places
* 26: Brean S. Hammond: Defoe and London
* 27: Adam Sills: Defoe and Britain
* 28: Andreas K. E. Mueller: Defoe's Europe: Allies and Enemies
* 29: Markman Ellis: Defoe and Colonialism
* 30: Robert Markley: Defoe and the Pacific
* 31: Rebekah Mitsein and Manushag N. Powell: Africa and the Levant in
Defoe's Writings
* Part IV. Afterlives
* 32: Nicholas Seager: The Celebrated Daniel De Foe: Publication
History, 1731-1945
* 33: Kit Kincade: Defoe's Critical Reception, 1731-1945
* 34: Benjamin F. Pauley: Attribution and the Defoe Canon
* 35: Rivka Swenson: Habits of Gender and Genre in Three Female
Robinsonades, 1767-1985
* 36: Robert Mayer: Defoe on Screen: Robinson Crusoe, The Red Turtle,
and Animal Rights