Volume
12, No. 2-3, January-April 2000
Reconsidering the Rise of the Novel
ARTICLES
Flat-Footed
and Fly-Blown: The Realities of Realism
Ian Watt
'A
Matter --Discutable--': --The Rise of the Novel--
Bliss Carnochan
The
New Model Eighteenth-Century Novel
Robert Folkenflik
Serious
Reflections on the Farther Adventures of Daniel Defoe
J. Paul Hunter
Reconsidering
'Triumvirates': Or, Why Do Novelists Always Come in Threes
Ros Ballaster
Mary
Davys' 'Probable Feign's Stories' and Critical Shibboleths about the
Rise of the Novel
Alan Downie
The
Man Who Came to Dinner: Ian Watt and the Theory of the Novel
Michael Seidel
Did
You Say Middle Class?: The Question of Taste and the Rise of the Novel
Robert Mayer
Reconsidering
Origins: How Novel Are Theories of the Novel?
Lennard Davis
Personal
Effects and Sentimental Fictions
Deidre Lynch
Staging
Novel Readers Reading
William B. Warner
The
Eighteenth-Century Moral and Political Essay and the New Novel: Context
and Resistance
John Richetti
The
Ruse of the Novel
Homer Brown
The
Rise of the Novel within the Theory of the Novel
Michael McKeon
Forensic
Fiction: The Case of Aphra Behn
Janet Todd
'Can
We All Get Along?': Gendered Criticism, Defoe, and the 'Rise of the
NovelRobert Alter, "The Question of Beginnings
Max Novak
The
Renovation of the Novel, 1759-1770
John Bender
Personal
Identity, Narrative, and History: --The Female Quixote-- and --Redgauntlet--
Everett Zimmerman