Defoe and the Uses of Narrative |
Contents
Robinson Crusoe | 25 |
The Impersonal Narrator | 66 |
The Captain and Moll | 97 |
Copyright | |
2 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
action ambiguity argue beliefs Bob's casuistry causal Cavalier Cavalier's Charles Gildon coherent Colonel Jack complex conclusion of Roxana Courtilz created critics Crusoe's Daniel Defoe Defoe's development Defoe's narratives E. M. W. Tillyard earlier effect episodes example experience factual illusion Farther Adventures fate fiction finally first-person Gildon horror human Ian Watt illusion of truth implied instability intention interest interpretation Journal kind later least literary McKillop meaning Michael Boardman Moll Flanders Moll's story moral narrator narrator's nature Novak novelistic Pamela pattern Paul Hunter personality Plague possibilities potential probable problem pseudofactual pseudohistory question reader recent recognized referential reportorial reveal rhetoric Richardson Robinson Crusoe Samuel Johnson satiric says seems sense sequence Sheldon Sacks shift significance Singleton situation sort Starr storytelling strategies structure suggest Susan teleology things thought tion Tom Jones traditional novel tragic true story truth virtue Watt wou'd write Zimmerman