Eighteenth-Century Fiction and the Law of Property
Cambridge University Press

Eighteenth-Century Fiction and the Law of Property

Subjects: Literature, Literary studies: c 1500 to c 1800
ISBN13: 9780521024594
Published: 09 Mar 2006

Format - Paperback / softback
By Schmidgen, Wolfram

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Regular price A$64.56
Sale price A$64.56 Regular price A$66.56

Eighteenth-Century Fiction and the Law of Property

Regular price A$64.56
Sale price A$64.56 Regular price A$66.56
Product description

In Eighteenth-Century Fiction and the Law of Property, Wolfram Schmidgen draws on legal and economic writings to analyse the description of houses, landscapes, and commodities in eighteenth-century fiction. His study argues that such descriptions are important to the British imagination of community. By making visible what it means to own something, they illuminate how competing concepts of property define the boundaries of the individual, of social community, and of political systems. In this way, Schmidgen recovers description as a major feature of eighteenth-century prose, and he makes his case across a wide range of authors, including Daniel Defoe, Henry Fielding, William Blackstone, Adam Smith, and Ann Radcliffe. The book's most incisive theoretical contribution lies in its careful insistence on the unity of the human and the material: in Schmidgen's argument, persons and things are inescapably entangled. This approach produces fresh insights into the relationship between law, literature, and economics.

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