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Atlas of the European Novel 1800-1900 (1997)

by Franco Moretti

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2445116,880 (3.59)5
A groundbreaking study in literary geography. An Atlas of the European Novel 1800-1900 explores the fascinating connections between literature and space. In this pioneering study, Franco Moretti presents a fresh and exciting perspective en the European novel. In a series of one hundred maps, Moretti illuminates the geographical assumptions of nineteenth-century novels and the geographical reach of particular authors and genres across the continent. A good map, he discovers, can be worth a thousand words in posing new questions and allowing us to see connections that have so tar escaped us. Reading his Atlas, we become aware of the secret structure of Dickens's and Conan Doyle's London, and see how the fictional settings of Austen's Britain, or picaresque Spain, or the France of the Comedie humaine imagine national identity in different ways. In a final chapter on "narrative markets," Moretti tells us which books were most popular in the provincial libraries of Victorian Britain, and charts the European diffusion of Don Quixote, Buddenbrooks, and the great nineteenth-century bestsellers. In Franco Moretti's Atlas, maps are net ornaments, but analytical tools which, in making connections explicit and visible, allow us to 'see' literature in a completely new way. This path-breaking study suggests that space may well be the secret protagonist of cultural history.… (more)
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» See also 5 mentions

Showing 5 of 5
The Epidemiology of the Novel.
  mdstarr | Sep 11, 2011 |
This book gives new and accessible perspectives on 19th century European literature, and I found many of Moretti's points intriguing. The maps he has created are truly phenomenal, and present so much more information than could be described in words. The writing style is precise and smart but informal, and ideas are presented clearly. Much of the book focuses, however, on a relatively small number of books, and while it's not absolutely necessary to have read them, it would probably help - my lack of Balzac hurt me a bit, but knowledge of the works discussed isn't crucial. ( )
1 vote nperrin | Feb 12, 2007 |
The Epidemiology of the Novel.
  muir | Dec 7, 2007 |
This review has been flagged by multiple users as abuse of the terms of service and is no longer displayed (show).
  chrisbrooke | Nov 4, 2005 |
Showing 5 of 5
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A groundbreaking study in literary geography. An Atlas of the European Novel 1800-1900 explores the fascinating connections between literature and space. In this pioneering study, Franco Moretti presents a fresh and exciting perspective en the European novel. In a series of one hundred maps, Moretti illuminates the geographical assumptions of nineteenth-century novels and the geographical reach of particular authors and genres across the continent. A good map, he discovers, can be worth a thousand words in posing new questions and allowing us to see connections that have so tar escaped us. Reading his Atlas, we become aware of the secret structure of Dickens's and Conan Doyle's London, and see how the fictional settings of Austen's Britain, or picaresque Spain, or the France of the Comedie humaine imagine national identity in different ways. In a final chapter on "narrative markets," Moretti tells us which books were most popular in the provincial libraries of Victorian Britain, and charts the European diffusion of Don Quixote, Buddenbrooks, and the great nineteenth-century bestsellers. In Franco Moretti's Atlas, maps are net ornaments, but analytical tools which, in making connections explicit and visible, allow us to 'see' literature in a completely new way. This path-breaking study suggests that space may well be the secret protagonist of cultural history.

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