TRANSATLANTIC EXCHANGES: THE RISE OF THE EARLY AMERICAN NOVEL
The present article aims to provide a revisionist approach to the early American novel by considering the relation between English models and American imitations, on the one hand, and transatlantic cultural exchanges, on the other, which have contributed to the rise of an autonomous literature whose...
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description | The present article aims to provide a revisionist approach to the early American novel by considering the relation between English models and American imitations, on the one hand, and transatlantic cultural exchanges, on the other, which have contributed to the rise of an autonomous literature whose development was inextricably linked to the founding of the nation. Although the early American novel was a generic extension predicated on eighteenth-century English prototypes, I claim that it struggled to find its own voice in a republic in which novels, along with other fictional material, were deemed as public property and common knowledge, two major prerequisites of Republicanism understood as civic humanism. |
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subjects | 18th century Aesthetics Ambiguity American literature Authorship Biographies Cultural identity Culture Fiction Folklore Genre Ideology Intersectionality Language and Literature Studies Literary canon Literary characters Literary criticism Literary devices Literary influences Literature Narrative techniques Narratives Novels Plot (Narrative) Printed materials Publishing Publishing industry Readers Reading Sermons Studies of Literature Travel literature Writers |
title | TRANSATLANTIC EXCHANGES: THE RISE OF THE EARLY AMERICAN NOVEL |
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