Daniel Defoe

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    to focus on humanity’s capacity for corruption and blatant savagery. The texts Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe, Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift, and an A Satire against Reason and Mankind by Rochester are quick to showcase the corruption that plagues the English human nature while displaying society’s role in masking this corruption with a perpetuating sense of nationalism and egotism. Daniel Defoe wrote Robinson Crusoe as a restless and generally unhappy character in the beginning of the novel

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    accomplish and maintain a life independent of any semblance of masculine control. Daniel Defoe begins his novel, history, or story of Roxana: The Fortunate Mistress explaining how the goal of the “History of this Beautiful Lady, is to speak for itself” and that “if all the most diverting Parts of it are not adapted to the Instuction and Improvement of the Reader, it must be from the Defect of his Performance” (Defoe, Preface). Roxana is a multifaceted tale. It is a novel that portrays a story that

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    "A Journal of the Plague Year", is a novel written in first person, told by the protagonist H.F. It was written by Daniel Defoe and speaks of the plague that occurred in London. This book was published about 57 years after the plague occurred. This novel is a story of his experiences during that plague that occurred in London in the year 1665. It is a fictional book but there is a lot of data, statistics, and even government documents throughout the pages. H.F. speaks on how the plague must have

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    looking through the philosophical works that preceded Daniel Defoe’s novel we can see how it ponders the questions of its time and presents a metaphor of the development of morality, economics and religion. Both, the ideas presented by Thomas Hobbs and Bernard Mandeville’s An Enquiry into the Origin of Moral Virtue will serve us well in understanding where Defoe is coming from and how he is actually developing upon theses philosophies. Defoe boldly takes the ideas of his time and applies them to

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    First-person narration in Defoe A) Find and list SIX printed or online catalogues or databases. 1. JSTOR 2. ProQuest 3. Project MUSE 4. Cambridge Companions Online (http://universitypublishingonline.org.ezproxy.is.ed.ac.uk) 5. Oxford Scholarship Online, University Press Scholarship Online (UPSO) (http://www.oxfordscholarship.com.ezproxy.is.ed.ac.uk/) 6. Searcher 7. University of Edinburgh 's Library Catalogue a. Three relevant monographs. Novak, Maximillian E. Daniel Defoe: Master of Fictions: His

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    produces unperceivable effects. On numerous occasions, it appears as if we have refuted John Donne and become individual islands, gradually drifting towards the existential view that humans are ultimately alone. Mary Shelley, in Frankenstein, and Daniel Defoe, in Robinson Crusoe, both apply isolation and extreme loneliness to characters whom appear to be rather insignificant, however, in actuality these characters profoundly buttress the authors’ reasoning and explanations. Such characters that may

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    In Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe, it tells the story of young man from the city York. The original name of Robinson was Kreutznar but was called Crusoe instead because so many people would butcher his name. Robinson was the third son for his father and mother. The first born son for Robinson’s father was in the military as Lt. Col and was killed in action near the famous battle at Dunkirk. The second son of the family was more or less a disappointment, since neither Robinson or his parents knew

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    I alive (Defoe 159).” This cry by H.F. is a fascinating statement of a survivor of the 1665 Plague in London. The distribution of burdens in the book was unequal. Personally, Daniel Defoe was not as impacted as society was as a whole. The intervention of government is supported as effective but the aftermath of the events reveals the standards that were perpetuated during the plague were not established as a permanent social institute. INDIVIDUAL RESPONSE In his accounts, Daniel Defoe was relatively

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    A Journal of the Plague Year is a first person account of what it was like living through the times of the plague. It recollects stories and other accounts of plague times heard by and collected by the Defoe from other involved individuals. Explains many aspects before, during, and after the plague of their ways of life and culture. Tells of tales of survivors of the plague but mostly off different tales of deaths and how they died in many outrageous and tragic ways of people killing their families

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    Marriage to Survive in Daniel Defoe’s Moll Flanders Although the central concerns of women during the eighteen-century was of courtship and marriage, social graces, and dignity, money was also a very important concern. “Many of the female characters in eighteenth-century novels are portrayed as intensely aware of finances and markedly interested in the getting and keeping of money” (Scheuermann, 311). Daniel Defoe’s fictional heroine, Moll Flanders is always thinking in economic terms and looking

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