
- 312 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
Objects we traditionally regard as "mere" imitations of the humanādolls, automata, puppetsāproliferated in eighteenth-century England's rapidly expanding market culture. During the same period, there arose a literary genre called "the novel" that turned the experience of life into a narrated object of psychological plausibility. Park makes a bold intervention in histories of the rise of the novel by arguing that the material objects abounding in eighteenth-century England's consumer markets worked in conjunction with the novel, itself a commodity fetish, as vital tools for fashioning the modern self. As it constructs a history for the psychology of objects, The Self and It revises a story that others have viewed as originating later: in an age of Enlightenment, things have the power to move, affect people's lives, and most of all, enable a fictional genre of selfhood. The book demonstrates just how much the modern psycheāand its thrilling projections of "artificial life"āderive from the formation of the early novel, and the reciprocal activity between made things and invented identities that underlie it.
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Information
Table of contents
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Table of Contents
- Table of Figures
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Its, Parts, Wholes, and the Eighteenth-Century Self
- NOVEL
- FETISH
- DOLL
- AUTOMATON
- PUPPET
- LAST THINGS
- Notes
- Index