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Encyclopedia of the Novel (Innbundet (stive permer))
General Editor Peter Melville Logan is Professor of English at Temple University, USA and Director of the Center for the Humanities at Temple. He specializes in nineteenth-century British literature, critical theory, the history of the novel, and the history of science. He is the author of Victorian Fetishism: Intellectuals and Primitives (2009) and Nerves and Narratives: A Cultural History of Hysteria in Nineteenth-Century British Prose (1997), as well as articles on Victorian popular culture, George Eliot, and Matthew Arnold. Associate Editors Olakunle George is Associate Professor of English and Africana Studies at Brown University, USA, where he teaches African literary and cultural studies, Afro-Diasporic cultural criticism, and Anglo-American literary theory. He is the author of Relocating Agency: Modernity and African Letters (2003) and articles in Comparative Literature Studies, Diacritics, Novel: A Forum on Fiction, and Representations. Susan Hegeman is Associate Professor of English at the University of Florida, USA, where she specializes in twentieth-century American literature, popular culture, cultural history, and critical theory. She is the author of Patterns for America: Modernism and the Concept of Culture (1999) and The Cultural Return (forthcoming 2011). Efrain Kristal is Chair of the Department of Comparative Literature at the University of California, Los Angeles, USA, where he is also Professor of Spanish and French. He is editor of The Cambridge Companion to the Latin American Novel (2005) and Jorge Luis Borges's Poems of the Night (2010), and the author of numerous books and articles on literature, translation studies, and aesthetics.
An advanced reference resource, The Encyclopedia of the Novel offers authoritative accounts of the history, terminology, genre and theory of the novel, in over 150 articles written by leading scholars in the field* Part of the Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopedia of Literature* Arranged in A-Z format across 2 fully indexed and meticulously cross-referenced volumes, featuring nearly 150 contributors and over 500,000 words* Written by an international cast of leading scholars, overseen by an Advisory Board of 37 specialists* Entries explore the history and tradition of the novel in different areas of the world; formal elements of the novel (story, plot, character, narrator); technical aspects of the genre (such as realism, narrative structure and style) as well as subgenres, including the bildungsroman and the graphic novel; theoretical problems, like definitions of the novel; and topics in book history and the novel's relationship to other arts and disciplines* Online version provides students and researchers with 24/7 access to authoritative reference and powerful searching, browsing and cross-referencing capabilities* Special introductory price available
Volume I. Alphabetical List of Entries. List of Entries by Topic. Board of Advisors. Contributors. Introduction. Acknowledgments. The Novel A-L. Adaptation/Appropriation. African American Novel. Ancient Narratives of China. Ancient Narratives of South Asia. Ancient Narratives of the West. Andes. Anthropology. Arabic Novel (Mashreq). Asian American Novel. Author. Authorship. Bakhtin, Mikhail. Baltic States. Bildungsroman/Kunstlerroman. Brazil. British Isles (18th Century). British Isles (19th Century). British Isles (20th Century). Canada. Caribbean. Censorship. Central America. Central Europe. Character. China. Class. Closure. Cognitive Theory. Comedy/Tragedy. Comparativism. Copyright/Libel. Decadent Novel. Decorum/Verisimilitude. Definitions of the Novel. Description. Detective Novel. Dialect. Dialogue. Dictatorship Novel. Disability Theory. Discourse. Domestic Novel. Early American Novel. Eastern and Central Africa. Editing. Epic. Epistolary Novel. Feminist Theory. Fiction. Figurative Language and Cognition. Formalism. Frame. France (18th Century). France (19th Century). France (20th Century). Gender Theory. Genre Theory. German Novel. Gothic Novel. Graphic Novel. Hebrew Novel (Israel). Historical Novel. History of the Novel. Iberian Peninsula. Ideology. Illustrated Novel. Intertextuality. Iran. Italy. Japan. Jewish American Novel. Journalism. Korea. Latina/o American Novel. Libraries. Life Writing. Linguistics. Low Countries. Lukacs, Georg. . Volume II. The Novel M-Z. Magical Realism. Marxist Theory. Melodrama. Memory. Metafiction. Mexico. Modernism. Mythology. Narration. Narrative. Narrative Perspective. Narrative Structure. Narrative Technique. Narrator. National Literature. Naturalism. North Africa (Maghreb). Northern Europe. Novel Theory (19th Century). Novel Theory (20th Century). Paper and Print Technology. Parody/Satire. Philosophical Novel. Photography. Picaresque Novel. Plot. Psychoanalytic Theory. Psychological Novel. Publishing. Queer Novel. Race Theory. Reader. Reading Aloud. Realism. Regional Novel. Religion. Reprints. Reviewing. Rhetoric and Figurative Language. Romance. Russia (18th-19th Century). Russia (20th Century). Science Fiction/Fantasy. Serialization. Sexuality. South Asia. Southeast Asian Archipelago. Southeast Asian Mainland. Southeastern Europe. Southern Africa. Southern Cone (South American). Space. Speech Act Theory. Story/Discourse. Structuralism/Poststructuralism. Surrealism/Avant Garde Novel. Time. Translation Theory. Turkey. Typography. United States (19th Century). United States (20th Century). Western Africa. Yiddish Novel. Index of Novelists. General Index.
An advanced reference resource, The Encyclopedia of the Novel offers authoritative accounts of the history, terminology, genre and theory of the novel, in over 150 articles written by leading scholars in the field* Part of the Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopedia of Literature* Arranged in A-Z format across 2 fully indexed and meticulously cross-referenced volumes, featuring nearly 150 contributors and over 500,000 words* Written by an international cast of leading scholars, overseen by an Advisory Board of 37 specialists* Entries explore the history and tradition of the novel in different areas of the world; formal elements of the novel (story, plot, character, narrator); technical aspects of the genre (such as realism, narrative structure and style) as well as subgenres, including the bildungsroman and the graphic novel; theoretical problems, like definitions of the novel; and topics in book history and the novel's relationship to other arts and disciplines* Online version provides students and researchers with 24/7 access to authoritative reference and powerful searching, browsing and cross-referencing capabilities* Special introductory price available
Volume I. Alphabetical List of Entries. List of Entries by Topic. Board of Advisors. Contributors. Introduction. Acknowledgments. The Novel A-L. Adaptation/Appropriation. African American Novel. Ancient Narratives of China. Ancient Narratives of South Asia. Ancient Narratives of the West. Andes. Anthropology. Arabic Novel (Mashreq). Asian American Novel. Author. Authorship. Bakhtin, Mikhail. Baltic States. Bildungsroman/Kunstlerroman. Brazil. British Isles (18th Century). British Isles (19th Century). British Isles (20th Century). Canada. Caribbean. Censorship. Central America. Central Europe. Character. China. Class. Closure. Cognitive Theory. Comedy/Tragedy. Comparativism. Copyright/Libel. Decadent Novel. Decorum/Verisimilitude. Definitions of the Novel. Description. Detective Novel. Dialect. Dialogue. Dictatorship Novel. Disability Theory. Discourse. Domestic Novel. Early American Novel. Eastern and Central Africa. Editing. Epic. Epistolary Novel. Feminist Theory. Fiction. Figurative Language and Cognition. Formalism. Frame. France (18th Century). France (19th Century). France (20th Century). Gender Theory. Genre Theory. German Novel. Gothic Novel. Graphic Novel. Hebrew Novel (Israel). Historical Novel. History of the Novel. Iberian Peninsula. Ideology. Illustrated Novel. Intertextuality. Iran. Italy. Japan. Jewish American Novel. Journalism. Korea. Latina/o American Novel. Libraries. Life Writing. Linguistics. Low Countries. Lukacs, Georg. . Volume II. The Novel M-Z. Magical Realism. Marxist Theory. Melodrama. Memory. Metafiction. Mexico. Modernism. Mythology. Narration. Narrative. Narrative Perspective. Narrative Structure. Narrative Technique. Narrator. National Literature. Naturalism. North Africa (Maghreb). Northern Europe. Novel Theory (19th Century). Novel Theory (20th Century). Paper and Print Technology. Parody/Satire. Philosophical Novel. Photography. Picaresque Novel. Plot. Psychoanalytic Theory. Psychological Novel. Publishing. Queer Novel. Race Theory. Reader. Reading Aloud. Realism. Regional Novel. Religion. Reprints. Reviewing. Rhetoric and Figurative Language. Romance. Russia (18th-19th Century). Russia (20th Century). Science Fiction/Fantasy. Serialization. Sexuality. South Asia. Southeast Asian Archipelago. Southeast Asian Mainland. Southeastern Europe. Southern Africa. Southern Cone (South American). Space. Speech Act Theory. Story/Discourse. Structuralism/Poststructuralism. Surrealism/Avant Garde Novel. Time. Translation Theory. Turkey. Typography. United States (19th Century). United States (20th Century). Western Africa. Yiddish Novel. Index of Novelists. General Index.
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Bokdetaljer
- Utgitt: 2010
- Innbinding: Innbundet (stive permer)
- Språk: Engelsk
- ISBN10: 1405161841
- ISBN13: 9781405161848
- Dewey: 809.3003
- Forlag: Wiley-Blackwell (an imprint of John Wiley & Sons Ltd)
- Sider: 1024



