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10 Literary Narrative Fiction

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Title: 10 Literary Narrative Fiction


1
10 Literary Narrative Fiction
  • Genres of Narrative Fiction
  • History of the Form

2
(No Transcript)
3
Dickens Bicentenary
  • Teachers resources
  • http//www.teachingenglish.org.uk/dickens
  • Literary events
  • http//literature.britishcouncil.org/projects/
  • 2011/dickens-2012
  • Student website for info
  • http//dublin.studenty.me/2012/02/07/what-the-dick
    ens-is-dickens-2012/

4
Dickens Bicentenary Continued
  • Celebration on 19 December
  • a live-streamed audience with Lucinda dickens
    Hawksley, Great-Great-Great-Granddaughter of
    Charles Dickens
  • http//audiencewithlucindadickenshawksley.eventbri
    te.com/

5
Narratives
  • Personal, political, historical, legal,
    medical narratives narratives power to capture
    certain truths and experiences in special ways
  • - unlike other modes of explanation and
    analysis such as statistics, descriptions,
    summaries, or reasoning via conceptual
    abstractions

6
The spectrum of fiction
  • fact fiction truth?
  • History Realism Romance Fantasy
  • Realism vs romance a matter of perception
  • vs a matter of vision
  • 2 principal ways fiction can be related to life

Realism Romance
7
Literary narrative fiction
  • literature art of language
  • kinds of Iiterature poetry,
  • drama,
  • narrative fiction
  • prose from Latin prosa or proversa oratio
  • straightforward discourse
  • M. Jourdain I've been speaking in PROSE all
    along!
  • Moliere (1622-1673), Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme

8
Literary conventions
  • an agreement between artist and audience as to
  • the significance of features appearing in
    a work of art
  • knowledge of conventions literary competence
  • narrative tells of real or imagined events
  • tells a story
  • fiction an imagined creation in
    verse/prose/drama
  • story (imagined) events or happenings,
  • involving a conflict
  • plot arrangement of action ? structure

9
Literary, narrative, fictional
  • distinct features, do not presuppose each other
  • Where do we place lyric poetry?
  • Marie-Laure Ryan, Possible Worlds,
    Artificial Intelligence, and Narrative
    Theory.Bloomington, Indiana Indiana UP, 1991

10
Literary, narrative, fictional
examples literary narrative fictional
Lit. narr. fict.
-
-
- -
-
- -
- -
- - - Nonlit. nonnarr. nonfiction

11
The history of fiction
  • Ian Watt, The Rise of the Novel Studies in
    Defoe, Richardson and Fielding (1957)
  • Dale Spender, Mothers of the Novel (1988)
  • Margaret Anne Doody, The True Story of the Novel
    (1996)

12
NovelIn J. A. Cuddon Dictionary of Literary
Terms and Literary Theory. London Penguin, 1999
  • Derived from Italian novella, 'tale, piece of
    news
  • applied to a wide variety of writings
  • only common attribute is that they are extended
    pieces of prose fiction
  • The length of novels varies greatly
  • when is a novel not a novel or a long
    short-story or a short novel or a novella?
  • Fewer and fewer rules
  • in contemporary practice a novel is between
    60-70.000 words and, say, 200.000.

13
Cuddon Novel
  • The actual term 'novel' has had a variety of
    meanings and
  • implications at different stages.
  • From roughly the 15th to the 18th c. its meaning
    tended to
  • derive from the Italian novella and the Spanish
    novela (the
  • French term nouvelle, is closely related)
  • The term (often used in a plural sense) denoted
    short stories or
  • tales of the kind one finds in Boccaccio's
    Decameron (c. 1349
  • 51). Nowadays we would classify all the contents
    of these as
  • short stories.

14
CuddonNovel /novelty
  • The term denoted a prose narrative about
    characters and their
  • actions in what was recognizably everyday life
    and usually in the
  • present, with the emphasis on things being 'new'
    or a 'novelty'.
  • It was used in contradistinction to 'romance'.
  • In the 19th c. the concept of 'novel' was
    enlarged.

15
CuddonNovel
  • A form of story or prose narrative containing
  • characters, action and incident and, perhaps, a
  • plot

16
CuddonNovel
  • The form - susceptible to change and
  • development
  • Pliable and adaptable to a seemingly endless
  • variety of topic and themes
  • A wide range of sub-species or categories.

17
CuddonNovel
  • The subject matter of the novel eludes
    classification.
  • A number of these classifications shade off into
    each other.
  • or example, psychological novel is a term which
    embraces
  • many books proletarian, propaganda and thesis
    novels tend to
  • have much in common the picaresque narrative is
    often a novel
  • of adventure a saga novel may also be a regional
    novel.

18
CuddonNovel
  • The origins of the genre are obscure
  • but in the time of the XIIth Dynasty Middle
  • Kingdom (c. 1200 BC) Egyptians were writing
  • fiction of a kind which one would describe as a
  • novel today

19
CuddonNovel
  • From Classical times
  • Daphnis and Chloe (2nd c. BC) by Longus
  • The Golden Ass (2nd c. AD) by Apuleius
  • Satyricon (1st c. AD) of Petronius Arbiter
  • Most of these are concerned with love and contain
    the
  • rudiments of novels as we understand them today

20
CuddonNovel
  • Oriental prose fiction
  • Arabian Nights Entertainments, or The Thousand
    and One
  • Nights, 10th c. the collection, collected and
    established as a
  • group of stories probably by an Egyptian
    professional story-teller
  • at some time between the 14th and 16th c.
  • Became known in Europe early in the 18th c.,
    since when they
  • have had a considerable influence.

21
CuddonNovel
  • Collections of novella or short tales
  • Italy -
  • Giovanni Boccaccios Decameron (134952, revised
    13701371)
  • had much influence on Geoffrey Chaucers The
    Canterbury Tales (late 14th c.)
  • Matteo Bandellos Le Novelle (written between
    1510 and 1560)
  • France -
  • Marguerite of Navarre Heptaméron (published in
    1558)
  • These were integrated short stories but important
    as they were
  • in prose
  • In their method of narration and in their
    creation and
  • development of character they are forerunners of
    the modern
  • novel

22
CuddonNovel
  • Until the 14th c. most of the literature of
    entertainment (and the
  • novel is usually intended as an entertainment)
    was confined to
  • narrative verse, particularly the epic and the
    romance.
  • Romance eventually yielded the word roman, which
    is the term
  • for novel in most European languages.
  • In some ways the novel is a descendant of the
    medieval
  • romances, which, in the first place, like the
    epic, were written in
  • verse and then in prose (e.g. Malory's Morte
    D'Arthur, 1485).
  • Verse narratives had been supplanted by prose
    narratives by the
  • end of the 17th c.

23
CuddonNovel
  • Spain - was ahead of the rest of Europe in the
    development of
  • The novel form.
  • Cervantes's Don Quixote de la Mancha (1605, 1615)
    satirized
  • chivalry and a number of the earlier novels
  • In France Rabelais's Gargantua (1534) and
    Pantagruel (1532)
  • can be classed as novels of phantasy, or
    mythopoeic

24
CuddonNovel
  • England, end of the 15th c., extended prose
    narrative
  • John Lyly's Euphues (in two parts, 1578 and 1580
  • Sir Philip Sidney's pastoral romance Arcadia
    (1590).
  • 1719 Daniel Defoe published his story of
    adventure Robinson
  • Crusoe, one in a long tradition of desert island
    fiction
  • Defoe's other two main contributions to the novel
    form were
  • Moll Flanders (1722), a sociological novel, and A
    Journal of the
  • Plague Year (1722) a reconstruction and thus a
    piece of
  • historical fiction

25
Books on Fiction
  • Booth, Wayne The Rhetoric of Fiction. Second
    edition. London Penguin, 1991 (1983)
  • Lodge, David The Art of Fiction. London
    Penguin, 1992
  • Rimmon-Kenan, Shlomith Narrative Fiction
    Contemporary Poetics. London and New York
    Methuen, 1983

26
Sub-genres
  • Integrated short stories
  • Arabian Nights' Entertainments, or The Thousand
    and One Nights,
  • Boccaccio Decameron
  • James Joyce Dubliners

27
Sub-genres
  • Romance
  • any sort of stroy of chivalry or of love
  • Cervantes Don Quixote (1605-1615)
  • Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (14th c.)
  • Thomas Malory Le Morte DArthur (15th c.)
  • Pastoral romance
  • Longus Daphnis and Chloe (2nd c. A.D.)
  • Philip Sidney Arcadia (1590)
  • Anti-pastoral
  • Thomas Hardy Tess of the dUrbevilles (1891),
    Jude the Obscure (1895)

28
Sub-genres
  • Picaresque novel
  • tells the life of a knave or a picaroon who is
    the servant of severel masters
  • Daniel Defoe Moll Flanders (1722)
  • Henry Fielding Jonathan Wild (1743)

29
Sub-genres
  • Novel of adventure / desert island novel
  • related to te picaresque novel and the romance
  • Daniel Defoe Robinson Crusoe (1719)
  • R.L. Stevenson Treasure Island (1883)
  • Mark Twain Tom Sawyer (1876)
  • Huckleberry Finn (1885)
  • James Fenimore Cooper The Last of the Mohicans
    (1826)

30
Sub-genres
  • Gothic novel
  • a type of romance, popular from the 1760s until
    the 1820s, has terror and cruelty as main themes,
    impact on the ghost story and the horror story
  • Horace Walpole The Castle of Otranto (1764
  • Ann Radcliffe Mysteries of Udolpho (1794)
  • Mary Shelley Frankenstein (1818)
  • Jane Austen Northanger Abbey (1818)
  • Charles Dickens Great Expectations (1861)
  • R. L. Stevenson Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886)
  • Dracula, doppelgänger

31
Sub-genres
  • Epistolary novel
  • in the form of letters, popular in the 18th c.
  • Samuel Richardson Pamela (1740) and Clarissa
  • Harlowe (1747, 1748)
  • Tobias Smollett Humphrey Clinker (1771)

32
Sub-genres
  • Sentimental novel / novel of sentimentality
  • popular in the 18th c., distresses of the
    virtuous
  • Samuel Richardson Pamela (1740)
  • Oliver Goldsmith The Vicar of Wakefield (1766)
  • Sentimentality in fiction
  • Laurence Sterne A Sentimental Journey (1768)

33
Sub-genres
  • Historical novel
  • a form of fictional narrative which reconstructs
    history imaginatively
  • Walter Scott Waverly (1814)
  • William Makepeace Thackeray Vanity Fair
    (1847-48)
  • Robert Graves I, Claudius (1934)
  • William Golding Rites of Passage (1980)

34
Sub-genres
  • Documentary novel
  • based on documentary evidence in the shape of
    newspapee article, etc.
  • Truman Capote In Cold Blood (1966)
  • Graham Greene The Quiet American (1955)

35
Sub-genres
  • Key novel
  • actual persons are presented under fictitious
    names
  • Aldous Huxley Point Counter Point (1928) (D. H.
    Lawrence)

36
Sub-genres
  • thesis / sociological / propaganda novel
  • treats of a social, political, religious problem
  • Harriet Beecher Stowe Uncle Toms Cabin (1852)
  • the condition of England novel /regional novel
  • Charles Dickens Hard Times (1854)
  • Charlotte Brontë Shirley (1849)

37
Sub-genres
  • Utopia
  • gr. Ou topos no place adn eutopia place
    where all is well
  • Thomas More Utopia (1516)
  • George Orwell Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949)
  • Jonathan Swift Gullivers Travels (1726, 1735)
  • William Golding Lord of the Flies (1954)
  • Anti-utopia, dystopia
  • Science fiction
  • Phantasy or fantasy

38
Sub-genres
  • Campus novel
  • has a university campus as setting
  • Mary McCarthy The Groves of Academe (1952)
  • Kingsley Amis Lucky Jim (1954)
  • David Lodge Changing Places (1975)

39
Sub-genres
  • The saga / chronicle novel
  • narrative about the life of a large family
  • John Galsworthy Forsyte Saga (1906-1921)

40
Sub-genres
  • Time novel
  • employs stream of consciousness technique, time
    is used as a theme
  • James Joyce Ulysses (1922)
  • Marcel Proust A la recherche du temps perdu
    (1913-1927)

41
Sub-genres
  • Psychological novel
  • concerned with emotional, mental lives of the
    characters
  • Virginia Woolf Mrs Dalloway (1925)
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