Governing Consumption: Needs and Wants, Suspended Characters, and the "Origins" of Eighteenth-century English Novels

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Bucknell University Press, 1999 - 246 páginas
He thereby argues that commercialization and the dynamic of its demand-based economy helped to shape the cultural processes by which the novel became a discursively rich, character-centered genre. Paradoxically, however, each of these "realistic" novelists, other than Sterne, failed in his attempt to erect character as a moral buffer against the suspense of a commerically driven world."--BOOK JACKET.
 

Contenido

Against the Grain An Essay on Origins
15
From Anthropology to Economy Needs and Wants and the Narrative of Commerce
33
The Suspended Character
65
Primitive Evidence versus Commercial Civilization The Case of Crusoe
93
Domestic Exchange Richardson versus Fielding
123
Sterne and the Industrial Novel
155
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Acerca del autor (1999)

James Cruise is on the faculty at Northwestern State University of Louisiana.

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