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The rise of the novel

The rise of the novel. Bartholomew Dandridge, A Lady reading Belinda beside a fountain , 1745. Yale Center for British Art, New Haven. The increase of the reading public in the Augustan Age was due to. The novel. 1. The rise of the novel. the growing importance of the middle class.

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The rise of the novel

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  1. The rise of the novel Bartholomew Dandridge, A Lady reading Belinda beside a fountain, 1745. Yale Center for British Art, New Haven

  2. The increase of the reading public in the Augustan Age was due to The novel 1. The rise of the novel the growing importance of the middle class the individual’s trust in his own abilities the practice of reason and self-analysis Most readers were middle-class women They used to borrow books from circulating libraries Only Connect ... New Directions

  3. The spokesman of the middle class. The novel 2. The novelist • The fathers of the English novel: • Samuel Richardson the sentimental novel • Henry Fielding the mock-epic novel • Daniel Defoe the realistic novel • Jonathan Swift the satirical novel Only Connect ... New Directions

  4. To be understood widely he wrote in a simple way. The novel 3. The novelist’s aim • Realism  not only linked to the life presented, but to the way it was shown. • Speed and copiousness his most important economic virtues since it was the bookseller and not the patron who rewarded him. Only Connect ... New Directions

  5. The novel 4. The characters A bourgeois, self-made, self-reliant man The Hero The mouthpiece of the author The reader is expected to sympathise with him All the characters had contemporary names and surnames  Robinson Crusoe struggled for survival or social success Only Connect ... New Directions

  6. Chronological sequence of events The novel 5. The setting • References to particular times of the year or of the day • “I was born in the year 1632, in the city of York” • (Robinson Crusoe) • Specific names of towns and streets • Detailed descriptions of interiors to make the narrative more realistic Only Connect ... New Directions

  7. The novel 6. The narrative technique Only Connect ... New Directions

  8. The novel 7. Themes Real life Everything that could affect social status The sense of reward and punishment linked to the Puritan ethics of the middle class Only Connect ... New Directions

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