- First novel in English
The following works of literature have each been claimed as the first
novel in English.*
Thomas Malory , "Le Morte d'Arthur ", (written circa1470 , published1485 )
* William Baldwin, "Beware the Cat ", (written1553 , published1570 ,1584 ) [Ringler, William A. and Michael Flachmann eds. "Preface." Beware the Cat. San Marino: Huntington Library, 1988.]
*John Lyly , "" (1578 ) and "Euphues and his England " (1580 )
*Philip Sidney , "The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia " (1581 )
*John Bunyan , "The Pilgrim's Progress " (1678 )
*Aphra Behn , "Oroonoko " (1688 )
*Simon Ockley (translator), "" (1708 )
*Daniel Defoe , "Robinson Crusoe " (1719 )
*Daniel Defoe , "Moll Flanders " (1722 )
*Samuel Richardson , " Pamela" (1740 )The following are some other early long works of prose fiction in English:
*
William Caxton 's1483 translation ofGeoffrey de La Tour Landry , "The Knight of the Tower " (originally in French)
*Thomas Nashe , "The Unfortunate Traveller , or The Life of Jack Wilton" (1594 )
*Jonathan Swift , "A Tale of a Tub " (1704 )
*Daniel Defoe , "The Consolidator " (1705 )
*Jonathan Swift , "Gulliver's Travels " (1726 )There are multiple candidates for first novel in English partly because of ignorance of earlier works, but largely because the term
novel can be defined so as to exclude earlier candidates:* Some critics require a novel to be "wholly original" and so exclude retellings like "Le Morte d'Arthur".
* Most critics distinguish between ananthology of stories with different protagonists, even if joined by common themes and milieus, and the novel (which forms a connected narrative), and so also exclude "Le Morte d'Arthur".
* Some critics distinguish between the romance (which has fantastic elements) and the novel (which is wholly realistic) and so yet again exclude "Le Morte d'Arthur".
* Some critics distinguish between theallegory (in which characters and events have political, religious or other meanings) and the novel (in which characters and events stand only for themselves) and so exclude "The Pilgrim's Progress" and "A Tale of a Tub".
* Some critics require a novel to have a certain length, and so exclude "Oroonoko", defining it instead as anovella .
* Some critics distinguish between thepicaresque (which has a loosely connected sequence of episodes) and the novel (which has unity of structure) and so exclude "The Unfortunate Traveller".Due to the influence of
Ian Watt 's seminal study in literary sociology, "The Rise of the Novel: Studies in Defoe, Richardson and Fielding" (1957 ), Watt's candidate,Daniel Defoe 's "Robinson Crusoe " (1719 ), gained wide acceptance. But with the rise of feminist criticism in the 1970s and 1980s and its concomitant rediscovery of forgotten writings by women, it is now often argued thatAphra Behn ’s "Oroonoko " (1688 ) is the “first English novel.”References
See also
*The article
novel for detailed information about the history of the terms "novel" and "romance" and the bodies of texts they defined in a historical perspective.
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