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Novel Art
A01=Mark McGurl
Allen Grossman
Author_Mark McGurl
Career
Category=DSBF
Category=DSBH
Category=DSK
Category=GTM
Class conflict
Criticism
Cultural capital
Dashiell Hammett
Detective fiction
Djuna Barnes
Edith Wharton
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Ernest Hemingway
Fiction
Fine art
Flatland
Frances Ferguson
Fredric Jameson
Friedrich Nietzsche
Genre
Genre fiction
Gertrude Stein
H. G. Wells
H. L. Mencken
Highbrow
Ideology
Institution
Irony
Jacques Derrida
John Dos Passos
Joseph Conrad
Literary criticism
Literary modernism
Literary realism
Literature
Malcolm Cowley
Michel Foucault
Middle class
Modern Fiction (essay)
Modernism
Narrative
Nightwood
Novel
Novelist
Philistinism
Pierre Bourdieu
Poetry
Prose
Publication
Publishing
Rhetoric
S. S. Van Dine
Sartoris
Scrutiny (journal)
Social class
Stephen Crane
Stupidity
Suggestion
Superiority (short story)
Symbolism (arts)
T. S. Eliot
The Art of Fiction (book)
The Golden Bowl
The House of Mirth
The Princess Casamassima
The Realist
The Various
William Dean Howells
William Empson
William Faulkner
Writer
Writing
Wyndham Lewis
Product details
- ISBN 9780691088990
- Weight: 312g
- Dimensions: 152 x 235mm
- Publication Date: 04 Nov 2001
- Publisher: Princeton University Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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Once upon a time there were good American novels and bad ones, but none was thought of as a work of art. The Novel Art tells the story of how, beginning with Henry James, this began to change. Examining the late-nineteenth century movement to elevate the status of the novel, its sources, paradoxes, and reverberations into the twentieth century, Mark McGurl presents a more coherent and wide-ranging account of the development of American modernist fiction than ever before. Moving deftly from James to Stephen Crane, Edith Wharton, Gertrude Stein, William Faulkner, Dashiell Hammett, and Djuna Barnes among others, McGurl argues that what unifies this diverse group of ambitious writers is their agonized relation to a middling genre rarely included in discussions of the fine arts. He concludes that the new product, despite its authors' desire to distinguish it from popular forms, never quite forsook the intimacy the genre had long cultivated with the common reader. Indeed, the "art novel" sought status within the mass market, and among its prime strategies was a promotion of the mind as a source of value in an economy increasingly dependent on mental labor.
McGurl also shows how modernism's obsessive interest in simple-mindedness revealed a continued concern with the masses even as it attempted to use this simplicity to produce a heightened sophistication of form. Masterfully argued and set in elegant prose, The Novel Art provides a rich new understanding of the fascinating road the American novel has taken from being an artless enterprise to an aesthetic one.
Mark McGurl is Assistant Professor of English at UCLA.
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