University Press Copublishing Division / University of Delaware Press
Pages: 210
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-61149-613-0 • Hardback • January 2016 • $97.00 • (£75.00)
978-1-61149-615-4 • Paperback • May 2019 • $46.99 • (£36.00)
978-1-61149-614-7 • eBook • January 2016 • $44.50 • (£35.00)
Elizabeth R. Napier is professor of English and American literatures at Middlebury College.
Preface
Introduction
Ch 1: "Strange Relations"
Ch 2: "Meer Manage": The Performing Self
Ch 3: "What am I a Whore for now?": The Compulsive Self
Ch 4: "Trusty Agents": The Divided Self
Epilogue: Discovering the Self
Coda
Works Cited
Napier's study of Daniel Defoe is literary criticism at its best: attentive to text, informed (but not dominated) by theory, written in lucid—indeed lyrical—prose. Napier begins with Defoe's complicated invocations of genre in the major fiction. Spiritual autobiography jockeys for interpretive dominance with picaresque fiction in Robinson Crusoe; criminal biography wars with conduct literature for narrative control of Moll Flanders and Roxana. Such generic instability demonstrates the difficulty of telling a story of self, a point further emphasized by accounts that are changed in the retelling or that never get fully told in the first place. From the first chapter's introduction of the problem of the narrative (and narrating) self, Napier moves on to chapters centered on dominant versions of the self in Defoe: the performing self, the compulsive self, the divided self. Each chapter provides ample evidence that the problematic of accounting for the self in these various ways is evident in all of Defoe's major fiction, though, predictably, Robinson Crusoe, Moll Flanders, and Roxana receive the most detailed attention. Napier's elegant, comprehensive, judicious study fully convinces that accounting for the self is a central concern of Defoe's major fiction. Summing Up: Essential. Lower-division undergraduates and above.
— Choice Reviews
Throughout this study, Napier’s knowledge of scholarship on Defoe’s major fictions and her breadth of commentary on novel theory as it relates to narration and the construction of the self are as thorough asthey are comprehensive.... Ultimately her argument is strong and clear... [T]his work is a valuable contribution to the study of Defoe’s major fiction.
— Eighteenth-Century Fiction
• Winner, Choice Outstanding Academic Title (2016)