ENGLISH NOVEL


Contents
Early novels in English
Romantic novel
Victorian Novel
Serial Novel
Famous Authors (Alphabetical order)
See also

Early novels in English


See the article First novel in English.

Romantic novel


The Romantic period saw the first flowering of the English novel. The Romantic and the Gothic novel are closely related; both imagined almost-supernatural forces operating in nature or directing human fate. Just as William Wordsworth and other poets were integral to the growth of English Romanticism, so Mary Shelley, and Ann Radcliffe were key to the sudden popularity of the Gothic novel.
It is equally important to recognize, however, the role that the contemporary reader played in the history of the English novel. For many years, novels were considered light reading for young, single women. Novels written with this in mind often contained sometimes heavy moral instruction, and, like earlier English literature, attempted to provide an example of the correct kind of conduct.
Jane Austen was a key novelist of this period.

Victorian Novel


The novel first began to dominate English literature during the Victorian era. Most Victorian novels were long and closely wrought, full of intricate language, but the dominant feature of Victorian novels might be their verisimilitude, that is, their close representation to the real social life of the age. This social life was largely informed by the development of the emerging middle class and the manners and expectations of this class, as opposed to the aristocrat forms dominating previous ages.
For the first time in English history, female authors assumed a central role. The English novel was defined, to a large extent, by the works of Charlotte Brontë, Elizabeth Gaskell, and George Eliot.
None of this should imply that the Victorian novel was not diverse; it was, extraordinarily so. Emily Brontë and Charles Dickens wrote in very different styles and addressed altogether different themes. Key to Victorian style is the concept of the authorial intrusion and the address to the reader. For example, the author might interrupt his/her narrative to pass judgment on a character, or pity or praise another, while later seeming to exclaim "Dear Reader!" and inform or remind the reader of some other relevant

Serial Novel


Most novels of the Victorian period were published in serial form; that is, individual chapters or sections appearing in subsequent journal issues. As such, demand was high for each new appearance of the novel to introduce some new element, whether it be a plot twist or a new character, so as to maintain the reader's interest. During this time, authors were paid by the word, which tended to create wordy prose. In part for these reasons, Victorian novels are made up of a variety of plots and a large number of characters, appearing and reappearing as events dictate.
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Famous Authors (Alphabetical order)



Austen, Jane

Breem, Wallace

Brontë, Anne

Brontë, Charlotte

Brontë, Emily

Burney, Fanny, later Madame D'Arblay

Carroll, Lewis

Collins, Wilkie

Conan Doyle, Arthur

Conrad, Joseph

Defoe, Daniel

Dickens, Charles

Eliot, George

Fielding, Henry

Forster, E.M.

Forster, Margaret

Gaskell, Elizabeth

Goldsmith, Oliver

Hardy, Thomas

Huxley, Aldous

Johnson, Samuel

Kipling, Rudyard

Lawrence, D.H.

Mansfield, Katherine

Meredith, George

Oliphant, Margaret, traditionally known as Mrs Oliphant

Orwell, George

Reade, Charles

Richardson, Samuel

Sackville-West, Vita

Shelly, Mary

Smith, Charlotte Turner

Shan, Darren

Smollett, Tobias

Sterne, Laurence

Stevenson, Robert Louis

Swift, Jonathan

Trollope, Anthony

Ward, Mary, traditionally known as Mrs Humphry Ward

Wells, H.G.

Wilde, Oscar

Woolf, Virginia

Wyndham, John

See also



List of English novelists

List of literary movements

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