Realism and Naturalism: The Novel in an Age of TransitionUniv of Wisconsin Press, 2005 - 312 pages Lehan's book provides readers with an illuminating and readable comprehensive intellectual and literary history of the major American, British, and Continental novels of Realism and Naturalism from 1850 to 1950. He offers readers a new way of reading these novels-working outward from the text to forms of historical representation. In this way, literary naturalism can be seen as a narrative mode that creates its own reality separate from that of other narrative modes. Employing this strategy, Lehan contends, readers will find a spectrum of meaning in these works that allows and encourages intertextuality-one novel talking or responding to another-for example, Zola's Nana to Dreiser's Sister Carrie or Zola's L'Assomoir to Sinclair's The Jungle. The range of novelists and sub genres is staggering-Lehan studies the gothic novel, the urban novel, the detective novel, the novel of imperial adventure, the western novel, the noir novel, and the novels of utopia and distopia. |
From inside the book
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Page vii
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Contents
Realism as a Narrative Mode | 34 |
Realism Narrative Subforms and Historical Process | 70 |
The Biological Model | 99 |
The Cosmic Model | 151 |
The SocialPolitical Model | 171 |
Thematics and the Conventions of the Novel | 188 |
Literary Transformations | 206 |
Critical Transformations | 235 |
Conclusion | 251 |
Selected Bibliography | 276 |
Common terms and phrases
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