
Contents
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Passion for Novelty Passion for Novelty
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Oroonoko Oroonoko
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The Rise of Fashion and Novel Selves The Rise of Fashion and Novel Selves
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“And these things are very various”: Fetish and Fashion in the Age of Enlightenment “And these things are very various”: Fetish and Fashion in the Age of Enlightenment
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Fashioned to Fashion: The New Species of Writing Fashioned to Fashion: The New Species of Writing
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One For the Pleasure of It: Consuming Novelty
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Published:October 2009
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Abstract
This chapter explores how the idea of the novel as a cultural experience of novelty emerged concurrently with its solidification as a literary medium. That the global origins of England's early market culture share the same exotic background as Bishop Pierre-Daniel Huet's history of prose fiction in his influential Treatise on Romance indicates that novelty in eighteenth-century lives comprised as much an act of consuming strange things as reading them. Both cultural phenomenon and textual artifact, the novel introduced experiences of metamorphoses through staging encounters with alterity. Perhaps no other narrative exemplifies the entwined conditions of experiencing novelty and novel writing than Aphra Behn's Oroonoko (1688). The chapter also investigates how, as novelty's recurring partner, fashion operated as a powerful agent for fictions of eighteenth-century British subjectivity, and was regarded as the age of Enlightenment's own fetish.
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