Index

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aestheticism

Against the Day (Pynchon)

Akhmatova, Anna

All That Man Is (Szalay)

All the Pretty Horses (McCarthy)

Alter, Robert

Amador, Jorge

The American Scene, (James)

Amis, Martin

Anna Karenina (Tolstoy)

anti-aestheticism

anti-sentimentality

Antonioni, Michelangelo

The Argonauts (Nelson)

Aristotle

As I Lay Dying (Faulkner)

Aspects of the Novel (Forster)

The Aspern Papers (James)

Atonement (McEwan)

Auden, W. H.

Austen, Jane

characters of

detail depiction by

narration by

realism and

registers used by

Austerlitz (Sebald)

author-character overlaps

in free indirect style narration

in metaphors/similes

The Awkward Age (James)

Babbitt (Lewis)

Babel, Isaac

Balzac, Honoré de

detail depiction by

Barthes, Roland

on detail depiction

on literary style

on narration

on realism

Baudelaire, Charles

“The Bear Came Over the Mountain” (Munro)

Beckett, Samuel

Bellow, Saul

characters of

detail depiction by

metaphor use by

narration and

style/language of

Benjamin, Walter

Bennett, Arnold

Berlin, Isaiah

Bernhard, Thomas

Berryman, John

Beyond Good and Evil (Nietzsche)

the Bible

Blake, William

Blindness (Saramago)

Blood Meridian (McCarthy)

The Blue Flower (Fitzgerald)

Bolañ o, Roberto

Bookforum

Brontë , Charlotte

The Brothers Karamazov (Dostoevsky)

Browne, Sir Thomas

Browning, Robert

Buddenbrooks (Mann)

Camus, Albert

The Castle (Kafka)

Cather, Willa

Cé line, Louis-Ferdinand

Cervantes, Miguel de

characters of

detail depiction by

narration by

Cé zanne, Paul

characters. See also author-character overlaps; consciousness of characters

and absence in characterization

belief in

detail’s influence on

in film

flat v. round

form’s tie to

introduction of

minor

in Miss Jean Brodie

novelistic

in postmodern literature

self-theatricalizing

“solidly realized”

Sparks’s depiction of

static

sympathy’s tie to

The Charterhouse of Parma (Stendhal)

Chekhov, Anton

characters of

detail depiction by

metaphor use by

narration by

Christie, Agatha

Christie Malry’s Own Double-Entry (Johnson)

cliché s

close third person. See free indirect style narration

Coetzee, J. M.

Cole, Teju

Coleridge, Samuel Taylor

The Comforters (Spark)

Confessions of an English Opium-Eater (De Quincey)

Connolly, Cyril

Conrad, Joseph

characters of

consciousness of characters

audience as factor in

characterological relativity and

Dostoevsky and

form’s influence by

motivation’s exploration via

psychology and humanity explored in

in Rameau’s Nephew

Contre Sainte-Beuve (Proust)

convention

in realist literature

Cooper, Dennis

The Counterlife (Roth)

Crane, Stephen

Crime and Punishment (Dostoevsky)

criticism

formalist v. ethical

form’s tie to

The Crying of Lot 49 (Pynchon)

“Daughters of the Late Colonel” (Mansfield)

David, King

David Copperfield (Dickens)

Davis, Lydia

“The Dead” (Joyce)

Death Comes to the Archbishop (Cather)

Death of Ivan Ilyich (Tolstoy)

Defoe, Daniel

DeLillo, Pynchon

Dept. of Speculation (Offill)

De Quincey, Thomas

detail depiction

character building via

flaneur as device for

Flaubert and

habitual v. dynamic

moderate v. extensive

modern realist narrative and

and mystery, advantages of

real life detail v. literary

relevant v. irrelevant

“telling” v. “untelling” forms of

“thisness” and palpability of

time signatures and

vague v. specific

dialogue, meaning and

Dickens, Charles

characters of

Diderot, Denis

Don Quixote (Cervantes)

Dostoevsky, Fyodor

characters of

detail depiction by

psychological study by

Dreiser, Theodore

Dumas, Marguerite

Duns Scotus, John

Dyer, Geoff

L’Eclisse (film)

Edwards, Jonathan

Effi Briest (Fontane)

The Elegant Variation (blog)

The Elements of Drawing (Ruskin)

Eliot, George

realism and

Elizabeth Costello (Coetzee)

Ellison, Ralph

Embers (Má rai)

Emerson, Ralph Waldo

The Emigrants (Sebald)

Emma (Austen)

Endgame (Beckett)

“The End of the Novel” (Mandelstam)

The English Novel (Ford)

Erpenbeck, Jenny

The Eternal Husband (Dostoevsky)

Eugene Onegin (Pushkin)

Far from the Madding Crowd (Hardy)

Faulkner, William

Ferrante, Elena

form and

fiction. See also convention; formalism; modernism; postmodernism; realism

consistency and plausibility in

self-reflective

verisimilitude and

Fielding, Henry

characters of

detail depiction by

film

commercial

self-reflexive

The Finishing School (Spark)

first-person narration

Fitzgerald, F. Scott

Fitzgerald, Penelope

the flaneur (loafer)

Flaubert, Gustave

characters of

detail depiction by

flaneur narration by

language of

modern realist narrative and

time signatures and

Fontane, Theodor

Ford, Ford Madox

on characters

on form

form

characters’ influence on

of Dept. of Speculation

ethical

in fiction v. non-fiction

modernism’s influence on

moral

novelistic convention and

philosophical aspects of

plot’s variance from

formalism

Forster, E. M.

Frantumaglia (Ferrante)

free indirect style narration

author-character overlap in

detail depicted via

flaneur as device for

James’s use of

mistakes/tensions in

in mock-heroic comedy

Freud, Sigmund

Fuentes, Carlos

Garcí a Má rquez, Gabriel

Garnett, Constance

Gass, William

Gervais, Ricky

The Gift (Nabokov)

Gilead (Robinson)

Giles, Patrick

Ginsberg, Allen

Glendinning, Victoria

Glü ck, Louise

Goodbye to Berlin (Isherwood)

The Good Soldier (Ford)

Gracq, Julien

Grant, Ulysses S.

Gravity’s Rainbow (Pynchon)

Great Expectations (Dickens)

Green, Henry

on dialogue

metaphor use by

Greenblatt, Stephen

The Guermantes Way (Proust)

Hadji Murad (Tolstoy)

Hamsun, Knut

“A Hanging” (Orwell)

Hardy, Thomas

characters of

metaphor use by

on realism

Heart of Darkness (Conrad)

Hemingway, Ernest

Hemon, Aleksandar

Henry IV, Part 1 (Shakespeare)

Henry IV, Part 2 (Shakespeare)

Henry V (Shakespeare)

Heti, Sheila

Homer

Hopkins, Gerald Manley

Houellebecq, Michel

Housekeeping (Robinson)

A House for Mr. Biswas (Naipaul)

How Should a Person Be? (Heti)

How to Both (Smith)

human behavior, psychology of

Dostoevsky and

literature’s exploration of

moral philosophy and

Hunger (Hamsun)

“Hurrahing in Harvest” (Hopkins)

“hypotyposis”

Ibsen, Henrik

The Idiot (Dostoevsky)

The Iliad (Homer)

Invisible Man (Ellison)

irony

authorial

Isherwood, Christopher

Ishiguro, Kazuo

James, Henry

characters of

detail depiction by

form and

metaphor use by

narration by

James, P. D.

Jane Eyre (Brontë )

Johnson, B. S.

Johnson, Denis

Johnson, Samuel

Joseph Andrews (Fielding)

Joseph Conrad (Ford)

Josipovici, Gabriel

Journey to the End of the Night (Cé line)

Joyce, James

detail depiction by

narration by

Kaddish (Ginsberg)

Kafka, Franz

Kant, Immanuel

Keats, John

Kennedy-Nixon debates

Kenner, Hugh

Kiarostami, Abbas

King Lear (Shakespeare)

“The Kiss” (Chekhov)

Knausgaard, Karl Ove

form and

realism and

Krauss, Nicole

Kundera, Milan

Labyrinth of Solitude (Paz)

“The Lady with the Little Dog” (Chekhov)

language

of Bellows

metaphors/similes in

registers of

repetition in

rhythm of

of Roth

simplicity in

of the world

Larkin, Philip

Lawrence, D. H.

characters of

language of

metaphor use by

le Carré , John

Lectures on Rhetoric and Belles Lettres (Smith)

Lerner, Ben

Levi, Primo

Lewis, Sinclair

Lives (Plutarch)

Lolita (Nabokov)

Lord Jim (Conrad)

Loving (Green)

Lowe, Brigid

Lyrical Ballads (Coleridge/Wordsworth)

Macbeth (Shakespeare)

Madame Bovary (Flaubert)

The Magic Mountain (Mann)

Make Way for Ducklings (McCloskey)

Mandelstam, Osip

Mann, Thomas

characters of

detail depiction by

Mansfield, Katherine

The Man Who Loved Children (Stead)

Má rai, Sá ndor

Marí as, Javier

Mating (Rush)

Maupassant, Guy de

Maxwell, Glyn

The Mayor of Casterbridge (Hardy)

McCarthy, Cormac

McCloskey, Robert

McEwan, Ian

Melville, Herman

Memento Mori (Spark)

Meredith, George

Metamorphosis (Kafka)

metaphors/similes

character-appropriate

free indirect style and

mixed

overuse of

Michelet, Jules

Middlemarch (Eliot)

Milton, John

mimesis. See realism

“Mr. Bennett and Mrs. Brown” (Woolf)

mnemonic leitmotifs

mock-heroic comedy

modernism. See also postmodernism; realism

Moliè re

Moody, Rick

The Moon and the Bonfire (Pavese)

Moral Luck (Williams)

moral philosophy

Mortals (Rush)

Munro, Alice

Murdoch, Iris

on characters

“Musé e des Beaux Arts” (Auden)

Musil, Robert

My Brilliant Friend (Ferrante)

“My First Fee” (Babel)

My Struggle (Knausgaard)

Mythologies (Barthes)

Nabokov, Vladimir

characters of

detail depiction by

metaphor use by

Nagel, Thomas

Naipaul, V. S.

dialogue by

narration. See also free indirect style narration

first-person

via the flaneur

Flaubert and

mistakes in

using modern narrative

third-person free indirect style

third-person omniscient

village-chorus

The Nearest Thing to Life (Eliot)

Nelson, Maggie

A New Mimesis (Nuttall)

Nietzsche, Friedrich

Nixon-Kennedy debates

No Country for Old Men (McCarthy)

Nostromo (Conrad)

The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge (Rilke)

Notes from Underground (Dostoevsky)

“novelism”

“The Novelist” (Auden)

Nuttall, A. D.

“Odour of Chrysanthemum” (Lawrence)

The Odyssey (Homer)

O’Faolain, Sean

Offill, Jenny

“The Old System” (Bellow)

One Hundred Years of Solitude (Garcí a Má rquez)

On Trust (Josipovici)

Open City (Cole)

origins of the novel

Orwell, George

Pavese, Cesare

Paz, Octavio

“Peasants” (Chekhov)

La Peau de chagrin (Balzac)

Pedro Páramo (Rulfo)

Pericles (Shakespeare)

The Periodic Table (Levi)

Persuasion (Austen)

Pessoa, Fernando

Plato

plot

form’s variance from

Plutarch

Pnin (Nabokov)

Poe, Edgar Allan

Poetics (Aristotle)

poetry

mock-heroic

Pope, Alexander

A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (Joyce)

Portrait of a Lady (James)

The Possessed (Dostoevsky)

postmodernism

characters and

films and

self-reflexive

Potter, Beatrix

Pour un nouveau roman (Robbe-Grillet)

Powers, J. F.

“Preface to Shakespeare” (Johnson)

The Prelude (Wordsworth)

Pride and Prejudice (Austen)

The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (Spark)

Pritchett, V. S.

Proust, Marcel

characters of

detail depiction by

Pushkin, Alexander

Pynchon, Thomas

The Radetzky March (Roth)

The Rainbow (Lawrence)

Rameau’s Nephew (Diderot)

The Rape of the Lock (Pope)

realism. See also characters; detail depiction

changing landscapes of

commercial

convention within

detail’s relation to

in fiction v. non-fiction

French language and perception of

“hypotyposis” and

lifeness as

moderate

self-reflective

truthfulness v.,

verisimilitude and

“The Reality Effect” (Barthes)

Reality Hunger (Shields)

The Red and the Black (Stendhal)

The Red Badge of Courage (Crane)

registers of language

“La Reine Hortense” (Maupassant)

Remains of the Day (Ishiguro)

repetition

ressentiment

Richardson, Samuel

Rilke, Rainer Maria

Robbe-Grillet, Alain

Robinson, Marilynne

Robinson Crusoe (Defoe)

Roth, Joseph

Roth, Philip

registers used by

“Rothschild’s Fiddle” (Chekhov)

Rousseau, Jean-Jacques

Rulfo, Juan

Rush, Norman

Ruskin, John

Sabbath’s Theater (Roth)

Saint-Exupé ry, Antoine de

Salerno-Sonnenberg, Nadja

Saramago, José

Sarraute, Nathalie

The Savage Detectives (Bolañ o)

Sea and Sardinia (Lawrence)

Sebald, W. G.

The Secret Agent (Conrad)

Seize the Day (Bellow)

self-plagiarism

Sentimental Education (Flaubert)

Shaftesbury, Lord

Shakespeare, William

characters of

detail depiction by

metaphor/simile use by

Shields, David

Shklovsky, Viktor

“A Silver Dish” (Bellow)

similes. See metaphors/similes

A Simple Heart (Flaubert)

Sister Carrie (Dreiser)

Smith, Adam

Smith, Ali

Smith, Zadie

soliloquy

Spark, Muriel

characters of

Splendeurs et misères des courtisanes (Balzac)

“Spring” (Hopkins)

Stead, Christina

Stendhal

characters by

Stoner (Williams)

“The Storyteller” (Benjamin)

stream of consciousness

free indirect style and

style, literary. See also characters; detail depiction; form; language; narration

narrating’s ties to

“The Suffering Channel” (Wallace)

Svevo, Italo

sympathy

fiction’s influence on

moral philosophy and

Szalay, David

The Tailor of Gloucester (Potter)

temporal management

“flash-forwards” and

The Temptation of Saint Anthony (Flaubert)

terrorism

Terrorist (Updike)

Tess of the D’Urbervilles (Hardy)

Thackeray, William

Theophrastus

The Theory of Moral Sentiments (Smith)

The Theory of Prose (Shklovsky)

third-person narration. See also free indirect style narration; narration

Through the Olive Trees (film)

Tolstoy, Leo

characters of

detail depiction by

narration by

realism and

sympathy and

Tom Jones (Fielding)

To the Lighthouse (Woolf)

Train Dreams (Johnson)

Trollope, Anthony

Turgenev, Ivan

Twain, Mark

Ulysses (Joyce)

The Unfortunates (Johnson)

Updike, John

detail depiction by

narration by

Valé ry, Paul

Vanity Fair (Thackeray)

Verga, Giovanni

village-chorus narration

Vitti, Monica

“The Voyage” (Mansfield)

Wall, Geoffrey

Wallace, David Foster

War and Peace (Tolstoy)

“Ward 6” (Chekhov)

Waugh, Evelyn

The Waves (Woolf)

Wells, H. G.

“What Is It Like to Be a Bat?” (Nagel)

What Maisie Knew (James)

“The Wheelbarrow” (Pritchett)

Whitman, Walt

“The Whitsun Weddings” (Larkin)

Williams, Bernard

Williams, John

Will in the World (Greenblatt)

Wilson, Angus

Wilson, Edmund

Wittgenstein, Ludwig

Wittgenstein, Paul

Wittgenstein’s Nephew (Bernhard)

Woolf, Leonard

Woolf, Virginia

Dostoevsky’s influence on

on form

language of

on realism

suicide of

Wordsworth, William

The Year of the Death of Ricardo Reis (Saramago)

Yeats, William Butler

Zambra, Alejandro