Biographies & Memoirs

Ian Watt: The Novel and the Wartime Critic

Ian Watt: The Novel and the Wartime Critic

Before his masterpiece The Rise of the Novel made him one of the most influential post-war British literary critics, Ian Watt was a soldier, a prisoner of war of the Japanese, and a forced labourer on the notorious Burma-Thailand Railway.

Both an intellectual biography and an intellectual history of the mid-century, this book reconstructs Watt's wartime world: these were harrowing years of mass death, deprivation, and terror, but also ones in which communities and institutions were improvised under the starkest of emergency conditions. Ian Watt: The Novel and the Wartime Critic argues that many of our foundational stories about the novel?about the novel's origins and development, and about the social, moral, and psychological work that the novel accomplishes?can be traced to the crises of the Second World War and its aftermath.

Introduction

Chapter 1. Lt Ian Watt, POW

Chapter 2. Defoe’s Individualism and the Camp Entrepreneurs

Chapter 3. Richardson, Identification, and Commercial Fantasy

Chapter 4. Chaos in the Social Order: Fielding and Conrad

Chapter 5. Realist Criticism and the Mid-Century Novel

Chapter 6. The Prison-Camp English Department

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