The novel originated in the early 18th
century after the Italian word "novella", which was used for stories
in the medieval period. Its identity has evolved and now a work of prose fiction is at least 50,000 words. Novels focus on
character development more than plot. In any genre, it is the study of the
human psyche.
The ancestors of the novel were Elizabethan prose
fiction and French heroic romances, which were long narratives about
contemporary characters who behaved nobly. The novel came into popular
awareness due to a growing middle class with more leisure
time to read and money to buy books. Public interest in the human character
led to the popularity of autobiographies, biographies, journals, diaries and
memoirs. The early English novels concerned themselves with complex,
middle-class characters struggling with their morality and circumstances.
Various writers contributed to the rise of the novel in the 18th century.
Daniel Defoe is generally regarded as
the first true novelist and the creator of realistic
fiction. He wrote in a matter-of-fact style and
combined this with powerful narrative and a
journalistic curiosity. His novels mixed adventure with
physical and psychological realism. Defoe's protagonists
of Robinson Crusoe (1719) and Moll
Flanders (1722) are self-reliant, resourceful individualists
who express his middle-class values. In his attempt to balance individualism
and economic realism with a belief in God's providence, Defoe created complex
characters who combine repentance for past misdeeds with a celebration of the
individual's power to survive in a hostile environment.
Samuel Richardson blended realism and romance into his
works; he developed the epistolary
novel into a serious art. His novels are
defined as “novels of character” since he focused not on
action, but on states of consciousness. The epistolary
form perfectly suited the expression of Richardson’s heroines’ feelings.
Jonathan Swift is one of the most controversial
among the great English writers. All his works
are characterized by his polemical genius; his
masterpiece Gulliver’s Travels is a political
satire of his times in which he uses the various races and
societies Gulliver encounters in his travels to satirize man’s errors,
vanities, follies and frailties; despite the depth and subtlety of the book, it is
often classified as a children's story because of Gulliver’s amusing and absurd adventures.
Laurence Sterne can be considered one of the fathers of the
experimental novel. His masterpiece, Tristram Shandy
is often referred to as an anti-novel because it ignores or subverts the
realistic conventions that the novel was developing in the Augustan Age. His
manipulation of time anticipates by almost two centuries the
experiments of Modernist writers like James Joyce and Virginia Woolf.
To sum up, 18th-century
novels shared the following features:
- The writer’s primary aim was to write in a simple way in order to be
understood even by less well educated readers.
- The realism of the novel was not linked to the kind
of life presented, but to the way it was shown.
- The hero of the novel was always the “bourgeois man” with his
problems; he was generally the mouthpiece of his author and
the reader was expected to sympathise with
him.
- All the characters were given contemporary names and surnames to
reinforce the impression of realism, and they struggled either for
survival or social success.
- A chronological sequence of events was
generally adopted.
- References were made to particular times of the year or of the
day.
- Great attention was paid to the setting with
specific references to names of countries, streets and towns, together
with detailed descriptions of interiors.
- The narrator never abandoned his characters whether the author employed 1st-person
or 3rd-person narration.
- The story was particularly attractive for the practical-minded
tradesman, who was self-made and self-reliant.
- The sense of reward and punishment, which was the
“message” of the novel itself, was related to the Puritan ethics
of the middle classes.
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