Defoe
De-Attributions
A Critique of J.R. Moore's
Checklist
Edited by P.N. Furbank and W.R. Owens
Daniel Defoe was one of the most important
and best-known writers of the eighteenth century but there is a feeling
among scholars that the Defoe 'canon' is a remarkably strange and not very
satisfactory construction. Between 1790, when the first bibliography of
Defoe appeared, and 1971, when J.R. Moore published the second edition
of his Checklist, the canon had swollen from just over a hundred items
to 570. A large proportion of these attributions had been made in the nineteenth
and twentieth centuries, on the basis of features of style, 'favourite
phrases' and resemblance to Defoe's known views. This book is a list of
all the items in Moore's Checklist (the current authority on the Defoe
canon) that at present the authors consider questionable with in each case
a note as to who was the first attributer, a brief synopsis and an explanation
of the reasons for doubting the ascription.
160 pages 1995 218 x 146 mm.
1 85285128 7 Cased £35.00
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