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Classical fiction --- Saints in literature --- Swindlers and swindling in literature --- Classical literature --- History and criticism
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Thematology --- West, Nathanael --- Twain, Mark --- Melville, Herman --- American fiction --- Deception in literature. --- Swindlers and swindling in literature. --- Tricksters in literature. --- History and criticism. --- Deception in literature --- Swindlers and swindling in literature --- Tricksters in literature --- Trickster in literature --- History and criticism
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Drawing on modern studies of rhetoric and the concept of the Trickster, the author examines Herman Melville, Mark Twain, and Nathanael West as creators of a fictive experience centered in deceptive or problematic transactions of confidence.The model of a confidence game, suggested by the writers' own thematic preoccupations, permits an analysis of the social motivations inherent in the fiction. The author concentrates on the process by which confidence is established and the ways in which deception leads to regeneration and an altered perception of authority. His approach increases our understanding of the interrelation between the writer, his reader, and the world each envisions.Warwick Wadlington examines individual texts, as well as the pattern of each writer's total work. His book distinctively combines an enlarging archetypal frame with rhetorical analysis of the writer-reader imaginative act. Treated as different forms of a coherent mode of fictive experience, the works of these important authors illuminate each other. Professor Wadlington's method results in decisively new readings of each text and contributes to a phenomenology of reading three writers whose works represent crucial "moments" in the artist-audience negotiation of mutual faith.Originally published in 1975.The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the original texts of these important books while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.
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American prose literature --- Swindlers and swindling in literature. --- Swindlers and swindling --- History and criticism. --- United States --- Civilization.
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Fraud --- Fraud in popular culture. --- Capitalism in literature. --- Swindlers and swindling in literature. --- Home economics in literature. --- Popular literature --- English literature --- Fraud in literature. --- History --- History and criticism.
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Comparative literature --- Thematology --- Picaresque literature, European --- European fiction --- Swindlers and swindling in literature. --- Rogues and vagabonds in literature. --- History and criticism. --- -Picaresque literature, European --- -Rogues and vagabonds in literature --- Swindlers and swindling in literature --- European picaresque literature --- European literature --- History and criticism --- Rogues and vagabonds in literature --- Knave in literature --- Swindler in literature --- Vol et voleurs dans la litterature
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