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The Novel, Volume 2

Forms and Themes
  • Edited by: Franco Moretti
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2006
View more publications by Princeton University Press

About this book

Nearly as global in its ambition and sweep as its subject, Franco Moretti's The Novel is a watershed event in the understanding of the first truly planetary literary form. A translated selection from the epic five-volume Italian Il Romanzo (2001-2003), The Novel's two volumes are a unified multiauthored reference work, containing more than one hundred specially commissioned essays by leading contemporary critics from around the world. Providing the first international comparative reassessment of the novel, these essential volumes reveal the form in unprecedented depth and breadth--as a great cultural, social, and human phenomenon that stretches from the ancient Greeks to today, where modernity itself is unimaginable without the genre.


By viewing the novel as much more than an aesthetic form, this landmark collection demonstrates how the genre has transformed human emotions and behavior, and the very perception of reality. Historical, statistical, and formal analyses show the novel as a complex literary system, in which new forms proliferate in every period and place.


Volume 2: Forms and Themes, views the novel primarily from the inside, examining its many formal arrangements and recurrent thematic manifestations, and looking at the plurality of the genre and its lineages.


These books will be essential reading for all students and scholars of literature.

Author / Editor information

Franco Moretti is Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Stanford University, where he founded the Center for the Study of the Novel. He is the author of Signs Taken for Wonders, The Way of the World, Modern Epic, Atlas of the European Novel 1800-1900, and Graphs, Maps, Trees.

Reviews

"There is very much worth exploring in Moretti's excellent collection of essays. . . . Moretti's fine collection is a robust testimony to the novel's long, complex, multicultural history."---Steven D. Smith, International Journal of the Classical Tradition

"Moretti's ability in his own criticism to use a playful, informal style is quite remarkable; he quickly puts readers at ease as he calls into question a great deal of what they think they know about narrative. . . . In short, both the range and the content of these essays are exceptionally lively and dynamic, and the writing is sophisticated."---Brian Evenson, Novel: A Forum on Fiction

"Hugely ambitious. . . . Explores fiction with a capaciousness that's exhilarating as well as eye-opening, as a galactic crew of critics swoop in on subjects ranging from ancient China to Toni Morrison."---Marina Warner, The New Statesman

"There is a great deal to relish here...Moretti and his contributors have succeeded in making the study of the novel--if not the entire 'literary field'--'longer, larger and deeper' that it was before, or than any single scholar could ever make it."

"No reader will come away from these volumes without a long list of novels they now want to read--novels, in many cases, well-known within their own linguistic or national tradition but unfamiliar outside of it. . . . [This is] a project so capacious, so audacious, so polyvocal--in a word, so novel."---Leah Price, Novel: A Forum on Fiction

"This two-volume set is the most important resource on the novel now available. Like the novel itself, this work spans the globe and the centuries. . . . Essential."

"An essential resource for all academic collections serving students of language and literature."---Thomas L. Cooksey, Library Journal

"When you open The Novel . . . you may think you know what a novel is; by the time you close it . . . you are no longer sure. . . . The sheer diversity of topics here is exciting and opens up many new horizons. . . . It is impossible to understand why the novel has been the quintessential modern art form, and why it has appealed to writers and readers around the globe, without understanding the circumstances of its rise in Western Europe in the 18th century. . . . [I]t helped to incarnate the modern sensibility, and to teach its readers what it means to be modern. . . . If the novel is indeed losing its central position in our imaginative life . . . it can only be because modernity itself is slipping away, with all it distinctive promise and menace."---Adam Kirsch, New York Sun

"Praise for Italian edition: "[These] interesting, useful books . . . are not humble, simply informative manuals: they offer essays that lead in multiple directions and examine fundamental problems and questions. They assess the breadth of current studies and they establish an analytical horizon for advanced contemporary culture.""---Giulio Ferrot, L'Unita

"Praise for Italian edition: "There are books that you read and reread, others that you consult when useful or just for the pleasure . . . . [The Novel] belongs to both categories because it is much more than a mere collection of essays on a specific subject (in this case, the novel as literary genre, reinterpreted through contributions by novelists, critics, philosophers, anthropologists, and historians from every part of the world). Its changing, evocative flavors are so mouthwatering that it is like a platter of tapas, the little appetizers served by Catalans before a meal, which often take the place of an entire meal. The topic is books--a continuous game of citations and reflections. From the outset, it gives the reader symptoms of an ancient hunger. We are not sure what pushes us to read it and we try to grab and hold on to as much of it as possible . . . . [The Novel] is not a book. It is a Pantagruelian feast that awakens limitless appetites. It helps to remind us how many flavors can be found in literature and--above all--how many we have lost by eating fast food for the brain.""---Diego De Silva, Il Mattino

"Praise for Italian edition: "These volumes are a heroic attempt to capture the great animal of words that we call The Novel. The hunting strategy employed by Franco Moretti and his contributors proves complex and articulated but at the same time oblique and diversified. A merely systematic work could never handle this subject. Neither could a totally anarchic approach . . . . This work is destined to occupy an important place in contemporary reflections on the novel and on narrative forms in general. The essays are agile but not superficial, specialized but readable, and current . . . . More than anything else, [The Novel] arouses one's desire to read and reread literary works.""---Dario Voltolini, La Stampa

"[A] very ambitious collection . . . . The Novel is an impressive achievement, and precisely because Moretti was so willing to include perspectives that diverge sharply from his own."---William Deresiewicz, Nation

"It's a rare literary critic who attracts so much public attention, and there's good reason: few are as hell-bent on rethinking the way we talk about literature. . . . There's no question that people will still be talking about these volumes twenty-five years from now."---Eric Bulson, Times Literary Supplement

"The most crucial aspect of the Il romanzo project is the idea driving it to see literature globally, to free 'the novel' from its modernist, strictly Western center of emergence and consider instead how the form has mutated around the world, and why."---Emilie Bickerton, Bookforum

"One of Choice's Outstanding Academic Titles for 2007"

"Honorable Mention for the 2007 John G. Cawelti Award, American Culture Association"


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2.1. THE LONG DURATION

Thomas Pavel
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Massimo Fusillo
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Sylvie Thorel-Cailleteau
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Fredric Jameson
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Readings: Prototypes

Massimo Fusillo
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Abdelfattah Kilito
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Francisco Rico
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Thomas Dipiero
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Perry Anderson
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Ian Duncan
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Paolo Tortonese
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Geoffrey Winthrop-Young
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Ambrosio Fornet
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2.2. WRITING PROSE

Francesco Orlando
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Michal Peled Ginsburg and Lorri G. Nandrea
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Umberto Eco
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Alex Woloch
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Nathalie Ferrand
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2.3. THEMES, FIGURES

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A. S. Byatt
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Bruce Robbins
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Fredric Jameson
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Readings: Narrating Politics

Benedict Anderson
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Luisa Villa
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Edoarda Masi
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Thomas Lahusen
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Piergiorgio Bellocchio
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Simon Gikandi
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José Miguel Oviedo
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Klaus R. Scherpe
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Readings: The Sacrifice of the Heroine

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Juliet Mitchell
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Sylvie Thorel-Cailleteau
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Valentine Cunningham
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Peter Madsen
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2.4. SPACE AND STORY

Mieke Bal
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Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht
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Margaret Cohen
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Philip Fisher
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Readings: The New Metropolis

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Ernesto Franco
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Ernest Emenyonu
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Roger Allen
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Ardis L. Nelson
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Homi Bhabha
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Sibel Irzik
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2.5. UNCERTAIN BOUNDARIES

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Francis Mulhern
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John Brenkman
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Espen Aarseth
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Readings: A Century of Experiments

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Myra Jehlen
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Ann Banfield
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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
April 12, 2022
eBook ISBN:
9780691243740
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
960
Other:
12 halftones.
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