Commerce, Morality and the Eighteenth-Century Novel

Liz Bellamy author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:23rd Jul '98

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This hardback is available in another edition too:

Commerce, Morality and the Eighteenth-Century Novel cover

The evolution of the novel in the context of the language and concepts of contemporary economic debate.

Liz Bellamy argues that the evolution of the novel needs to be considered alongside the emergence of modern economics. Through readings of a range of novels, Bellamy shows that debates over public and private virtues, and commercial and anti-commercial ethics, were a crucial influence on the novel as a form.British culture underwent radical change in the eighteenth century with the emergence of new literary genres and new discourses of social analysis. As novelists developed new forms of fiction, writers of economic tracts and treatises sought a new language and a conceptual framework to describe the modern commercial state. In Commerce, Morality and the Eighteenth-Century Novel, Liz Bellamy argues that the evolution of the novel in eighteenth-century Britain needs to be seen in the context of the discursive conflict between economics and more traditional systems of social analysis. In a series of fresh readings of a wide range of novels, Bellamy shows how the novel contributed to the debate over public and private virtues and had to negotiate between commercial and anti-commercial ethics. The resulting choices were crucial in determining the structure as well as the moral content of the novel.

"...offer[s] lively and provocative readings of eighteenth-century fiction and insights into its provenance." John Russell Stephens
"Bellamy introduces new discourses and genres into the cultural mix from which the novel emerges and reenvisages what these discourses are trying to do..." Modern Philology

ISBN: 9780521622240

Dimensions: 235mm x 161mm x 20mm

Weight: 466g

232 pages