princeton university press the novel volume 1 history geography and culture may 2006

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princeton university press the novel volume 1 history geography and culture may 2006

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[...]... universe around a narrative theme Seydou 19 72: 81 Hiskett 19 57; Wilks 19 63; Hodgkin 19 66 19 Seydou 19 72: 9 10 20 For example, Veillard 19 31; Bâ and Kesteloot 19 69 17 18 GOODY From Oral to Written 11 Both Finnegan (19 92) and Tedlock (19 83) reject the proposition that the epic is characteristically a feature of purely oral cultures and associate it with the early literate cultures of the Old World Finnegan... 19 72: 13 14 15 Seydou 19 72: 15 16 Seydou 19 72: 17 –20 13 14 10 A STRUGGLE FOR S PA C E are found on the fringes of the Sahara where such influences are strong and of long duration The Fulani epic of Silâmaka and Poullôri recounts the story of a chief ’s son and his slave together with a companion who attempt to relieve their country of its debt of tribute It is an epic of chiefship recited within a culture. ..x ON THE NOVEL syntactic labyrinths, metaphoric prose, and broken plot lines To make the literary field longer, larger, and deeper: this is, in a nutshell, the project of The Novel (and of its Italian five -volume original) And then, project within the project, to take a second look at the new panorama and estrange it The essay on the Spanish Golden Age develops its historical argument, and then: “Wait... Stating the “facts,” then turning them into “problems.” At the beginning of the historical arc, we wonder whether to speak of the Greek novel or of a cluster of independent forms At the opposite end, we explain why it is that the bestknown African novels are not written for African readers And so on The more we learn about the history of the novel, the stranger it becomes To make sense of this new history, ... Speakers The time taken varies with the Speaker and the degree of elaboration he employs, as well as with the point in the ceremony at which the recitation takes place It consists of two parts, the White and the Black The first is an account of the different ceremonies that are held over several weeks, and it is recited up to the point in the sequence that has been reached The Black, on the other hand,... Quixote of 16 04, in Charlotte Lennox’s The Female Quixote of 17 51, in the many objections to the novel that were expressed in the eighteenth century, and in the preference of most male readers for nonfiction and the development of a dominantly female reading public The novel is clearly a product of literate cultures as well as of leisured 27 Sommerville 19 96: 18 GOODY From Oral to Written 19 ones, yet... by printing Lord 19 60 Benjamin 19 68a: 87 3 Clark and Holquist 19 84, chap 13 , The theory of the novel. ” Doody 19 97 rejects the categorical distinction, found only in English, between romance and novel, placing the origin of the latter in ancient Greece 1 2 4 A STRUGGLE FOR S PA C E Today the word narrative has come to have an iconic, indeed a cant, significance in Western literary and social science... truthful account of events at the surface level But fiction may do just that, may make a claim to truth value That was the difference between romances and novels in England at the beginning of the eighteenth century The realistic novels of Defoe and others deliberately invite an assessment of the truth or otherwise of the tale The writers often claim truth for fiction—not the underlying experiential truth... preliterate rather than literate cultures During the 19 30s, the Harvard classical scholars, Milman Parry (19 71) and Albert Lord (19 60), made a series of recordings of songs in Yugoslav cafés and aimed to show that their style, especially in the use of formulaic expressions, made them representative of epics of the oral tradition However, Yugoslavia was by no means a purely oral culture, and its verbal... “God’s country”) There he meets “a slender young girl” and the High God shows them how a child is created in a mystical way The recitation continues at length with the man and woman quarrelling about the ownership of the male child and his education Meanwhile they are introduced, with the aid of the beings of the wild (“fairies”), to various aspects of LoDagaa culture, to the making of iron, the cultivation . GEOGRAPHY, AND CULTURE VOLUME 2 FORMS AND THEMES THE Novel VOLUME 1 HISTORY, GEOGRAPHY, AND CULTURE EDITED BY Franco Moretti Princeton University Press PRINCETON AND OXFORD Copyright 2006 © by Princeton. readers. Two perspectives on the novel, then; and two volumes. History, Geography, and Culture is mostly a look from the outside; Forms and Themes, from the inside. But like convex and concave in a Borromini. printing. 1 Lord 19 60. 2 Benjamin 19 68a: 87. 3 Clark and Holquist 19 84, chap. 13 , The theory of the novel. ” Doody 19 97 rejects the categorical distinction, found only in English, between romance and novel,

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