Graphs, Maps, Trees: Abstract Models for a Literary HistoryVerso, 2005 - 119 páginas Stanford Professor Franco Moretti argues heretically that literature scholars should stop reading books and start counting, graphing and mapping them instead. He insists that such a move could bring new luster to a tired field, one that in some respects, he says, is among the most backwards disciplines in the academy. Literary study, he argues, has been random and unsystematic. For any given periods scholars focus on a select group of a mere few hundred texts: the canon. As a result, they have allowed a narrow distorting slice of history to pass for the total picture. Professor Moretti offers bar charts, maps and time lines instead. His is a history of literature as data points. Charting not only the 18th-century British novel but entire genres - the epistolary, the gothic and the historical novel - as well as the literary output of countries like Japan, Italy, Spain and Nigeria, he shows literary history looks significantly different from what is commonly supposed. |
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Adventure Atlas Bakhtin Basalla bifurcations Bildungsroman branches Britain British Cambridge Central Places century Cerreti chapter Christmas amusements chronotope convergence cycle D'Arcy Thompson Dalmailing Darwin decade detective fiction diagram divergence of character Doyle emigration English Novel epistolary novels Ernst Mayr European Novel evolutionary mechanisms evolutionary trees explain Fernand Braudel force France free indirect style genes geography gothic novels Graphs Helpston historical novel human idea idyll individual James Raven Japan linguistic literary field literary form literary history literature London longue durée maps Mary Mitford metaphor migration miles models Moretti's morphological mutation narrative natural selection NEWGATE NOVEL novelistic genres object overleaf parish pattern Peter Garside Pomian populations present quantitative readers reading romanzo Schöwerling social space spatial species Stanford Companion Stephen Jay Gould structure survive theory Three Mile Cross tion tive trait tree of culture Victorian Literature village stories village's Woman novel words writes