The Impossible Observer
ISBN: 9780813159652
Platform/Publisher: Project MUSE / The University Press of Kentucky
Digital rights: Users: Unlimited; Printing: Chapters; Download: Chapters
Subjects: Reason in literature.; Reader-response criticism.; Enlightenment; Books and reading; English prose literature;

Rationality, objectivity, symmetry: were these really principles urged and exemplified by eighteenth-century English prose? In this persuasive study, Robert W. Uphaus argues that, on the contrary, many of the most important works of the period do not actually lead the reader into a new awareness of just how problematical, how unsusceptible to reason, both the world and our easy assumptions about it are.

Uphaus discusses a broad range of writers--Swift, Defoe, Mandeyville, Richardson, Fielding, Sterne, Johnson, and Godwin--showing that beneath their variety lies a fundamentally similar challenge, addressed to the critical procedure which assumes that the exercise of reason is a sufficient tool for an understanding the appeal of imaginative literature.


Robert W. Uphaus is associate professor of English at Michigan State University.

hidden image for function call