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10 - From history to the novel: the reception of Defoe

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 October 2009

Robert Mayer
Affiliation:
Oklahoma State University
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Summary

We have seen that the narratives of Defoe that have come to be regarded as novels were presented to readers as histories and were often initially read as such. Yet by the end of the eighteenth century Robinson Crusoe, Moll Flanders, A Journal of the Plague year, and the other “novels” had been issued under Defoe's name, and works by Anna Laetitia Barbauld, James Beattie, and Sir Walter Scott around the turn of the eighteenth century identified Defoe as a novelist and assigned at least some of his most important texts to the canon of English novels. This process was far from smooth, however; Scott initially left Defoe out of his Lives of the Novelists, and there was no entry on Defoe in John Dunlop's groundbreaking History of Fiction (1814). Still, as the nineteenth century proceeded, important studies of Defoe as a novelist by the likes of Charles Lamb, Walter Wilson, William Hazlitt, and Leslie Stephen appeared. What is surprising about all this commentary, however, is that it did not really settle what A. W. Secord would later label “the Defoe problem” – the question of how fact and fiction are related in his narratives – nor did it satisfactorily clarify the matter of what generic classification was appropriate for his major texts.

Uncertainty about Defoe has continued to our own day. It seems that if historians and theoreticians of the English novel cannot live without Defoe, they cannot live very comfortably with him either.

Type
Chapter
Information
History and the Early English Novel
Matters of Fact from Bacon to Defoe
, pp. 207 - 226
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1997

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