Book contents
- The Cambridge History of the British Essay
- The Cambridge History of the British Essay
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Preface to a History in the Manner of an Essay
- Part I Forming the British Essay
- Part II The Great Age of the British Essay
- Part III Assaying Culture, Education, Reform
- Part IV Fractured Selves, Fragmented Worlds
- 29 The Preface Essay
- 30 A Brief History of Travel and the Essay
- 31 Grist for the Mill: History and the Essay in India, 1870–1920
- 32 The African Gold Coast Essay: Straddling Fact and Prophecy
- 33 The Short Essay in Context, 1870–1920
- 34 A Room of One’s Own: The New Woman and the Essay
- 35 The Essay in the Age of Catastrophe
- 36 Undiplomatic Relations: Modernism and the Essay
- 37 Feeling Real: Psychoanalysis and the Essay
- 38 Transatlantic Essayism
- Part V The Essay and the Essayistic Today
- Book part
- Bibliography
- Index
29 - The Preface Essay
from Part IV - Fractured Selves, Fragmented Worlds
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 October 2024
- The Cambridge History of the British Essay
- The Cambridge History of the British Essay
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Preface to a History in the Manner of an Essay
- Part I Forming the British Essay
- Part II The Great Age of the British Essay
- Part III Assaying Culture, Education, Reform
- Part IV Fractured Selves, Fragmented Worlds
- 29 The Preface Essay
- 30 A Brief History of Travel and the Essay
- 31 Grist for the Mill: History and the Essay in India, 1870–1920
- 32 The African Gold Coast Essay: Straddling Fact and Prophecy
- 33 The Short Essay in Context, 1870–1920
- 34 A Room of One’s Own: The New Woman and the Essay
- 35 The Essay in the Age of Catastrophe
- 36 Undiplomatic Relations: Modernism and the Essay
- 37 Feeling Real: Psychoanalysis and the Essay
- 38 Transatlantic Essayism
- Part V The Essay and the Essayistic Today
- Book part
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
This chapter describes some of the salient characteristics of the ‘preface essay’, a form with a long history that has not received sustained critical attention. With reference to existing theories of the preface by Gérard Genette and Jacques Derrida as well as important examples of the form by authors mainly in the English literary tradition, ranging from John Dryden, through William Wordsworth, Joseph Conrad, Henry James, and to Zadie Smith, this chapter provides a conceptual framework for authorial preface essays, their generic characteristics, and what they reveal about the relationship between the prefatorial and the essayistic. It will argue that the preface essay is a space of authorial self-crafting that attains durability and literary value by combining aspects of the prefatorial, such as its dependence on the work it prefaces and its occasionality, with the essayistic movement from the specific to the general, and the particular to the abstract.
Keywords
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge History of the British Essay , pp. 439 - 452Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024