Romances and Narratives: Due preparations for the plague
Author : Daniel Defoe
Publisher :
Page : 296 pages
File Size : 18,62 MB
Release : 1895
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Daniel Defoe
Publisher :
Page : 296 pages
File Size : 18,62 MB
Release : 1895
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Daniel Defoe
Publisher :
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 14,92 MB
Release : 1899
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Daniel Defoe
Publisher :
Page : 334 pages
File Size : 24,80 MB
Release : 1895
Category : London (England)
ISBN :
Author : Daniel Defoe
Publisher :
Page : 300 pages
File Size : 34,90 MB
Release : 1899
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Daniel Defoe
Publisher :
Page : 438 pages
File Size : 29,38 MB
Release : 1895
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Daniel Defoe
Publisher :
Page : 322 pages
File Size : 11,65 MB
Release : 1905
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Daniel Defoe
Publisher :
Page : 294 pages
File Size : 13,91 MB
Release : 1895
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Daniel Defoe
Publisher :
Page : pages
File Size : 12,16 MB
Release : 1895
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Janette Turner Hospital
Publisher : W. W. Norton & Company
Page : 436 pages
File Size : 36,9 MB
Release : 2003
Category : Fiction
ISBN : 9780393325737
When the lives of two strangers become connected by the tragic loss of parents in a hijacked Paris-New York flight, they find themselves entangled in a web of terror, death, and betrayal.
Author : Maximillian E. Novak
Publisher : Rowman & Littlefield
Page : 251 pages
File Size : 29,28 MB
Release : 2014-10-24
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1611494869
This book explores significant problems in the fiction of Daniel Defoe. Maximillian E. Novak investigates a number of elements in Defoe’s work by probing his interest in rendering of reality (what Defoe called “the Thing itself”). Novak examines Defoe’s interest in the relationship between prose fiction and painting, as well as the various ways in which Defoe’s woks were read by contemporaries and by those novelists who attempted to imitate and comment upon his Life and Strange Surprizing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe decades after its publication. In this book, Novak attempts to consider the uniqueness and imaginativeness of various aspects of Defoe’s writings including his way of evoking the seeming inability of language to describe a vivid scene or moments of overwhelming emotion, his attraction to the fiction of islands and utopias, his gradual development of the concepts surrounding Crusoe’s cave, his fascination with the horrors of cannibalism, and some of the ways he attempted to defend his work and serious fiction in general. Most of all, Transformations, Ideology, and the Real in Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe and Other Narratives establishes the complexity and originality of Defoe as a writer of fiction.