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Moll Flanders by Daniel Defoe.
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Moll Flanders
by Daniel Defoe
Daniel Defoe was born in 1660, the son of a candlemaker in London. He originally intended to become a tradesman, but his incompetence with money (nearly all of his bus...
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Title: Moll Flanders
Author: Daniel Defoe
Release Date: December, 1995 [EBook #370] [This
file was last updated on March 5, 2003]
Edition: 11
Language: English
Character ...
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Biography EssayDaniel Defoe's modern literary reputation is based almost entirely on the series of prose narratives that he wrote from 1719 to 1724. In April of 1719 Robinson Crusoe was published; wi...
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The English novelist, journalist, poet, and government agent Daniel Defoe (1660-1731) wrote more than 500 books, pamphlets, articles, and poems. Among the most productive authors of the Augustan Age, ...
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The sheer weight of numbers is astounding. Daniel Defoe wrote over five hundred and sixty works of fiction, nonfiction prose, and poetry. His best-known novels were composed within five years of each ...
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Defoe's modern literary reputation is based almost entirely on the series of prose narratives that he wrote from 1719 to 1724. In April of 1719 Robinson Crusoe was published; with the success of that ...
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How does a poet turn into a novelist, what are the skills or talents that he takes from one art to the other, and what are the preoccupations, themes, or subjects in the poems themselves? These are so...
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Today Daniel Defoe is known as the author of great novels--Robinson Crusoe (1719), Moll Flanders (1721), A Journal of the Plague Year (1722), Roxana (1724), and others less well known. In his own time...
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In the following essay, Chaber explicates some of the Marxist and matriarchal themes of Defoe's novel.
I
Moll Flanders' escape through London streets after her first theft is an image of...
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In this essay, Pollak explores the role of incest in Moll's struggle for financial, linguistic, and sexual autonomy.
In many ways, Moll Flanders is a literary character who moves impressively a...
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In the following essay, Langford discusses how the editor's preface to Moll Flanders should affect the reading of the novel.
Who is speaking me? Am I a phantom too? To what order do I belong? A...
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In the essay that follows, Michael examines the “apparent absence of a moral center” in Moll Flanders, and applies the work of several Postmodern theorists to demonstrate the ways in whi...
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In the following essay, Suarez argues that Defoe stresses the insincerity of Moll's repentance with deliberate irony.
The proper habit of repentance is not fine linen, or any delicate array ...
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In the following essay, Swan places Moll's trial at Newgate into context as a didactic comment on legal reform, highlighting the role of “judicial discourse” in Moll's narr...
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In the following essay, Olson explores the relationship between language and kinship taboos in Defoe's novel.
Kinship laws, which govern the system of combinations in mating, correspond to ling...
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"And after all, what is a lie? `Tis but
the truth in masquerade"
Lord Byron (1)
Moll Flanders, a potent character of Defoe's, is haunted by her past, and as such, is driven to tell her story. Man...
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