About This Book
A lecture argues that fiction should be regarded as a fine art equal to painting, music, and poetry, governed by general laws that can be taught yet dependent on innate gifts; it examines public misconceptions that reduce the novelist to a mere storyteller, outlines three causes of that undervaluation—absence of official honours, amateur belief in intuition, and lack of institutional recognition—and defends the seriousness of fiction while describing its antiquity, ubiquity, moral influence, and unique power as a means of teaching and shaping popular belief.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
6 picks
All Sorts and Conditions of Men: An Impossible Story
by Walter Besant
Armorel of Lyonesse: A Romance of To-day
by Walter Besant
As We Are and As We May Be
by Walter Besant
Early London: Prehistoric, Roman, Saxon and Norman
by Walter Besant
East London
by Walter Besant
Fifty Years Ago
by Walter Besant
You May Also Like
6 picks
"'Tis Sixty Years Since" / Address of Charles Francis Adams; Founders' Day, January 16, 1913
by Charles Francis Adams
"... és a felelősségtől való rettegés"
by Émile Faguet
"A Most Unholy Trade," Being Letters on the Drama by Henry James
by Henry James
"About My Father's Business": Work Amidst the Sick, the Sad, and the Sorrowing
by Thomas Archer
"America for Americans!" / The Typical American, Thanksgiving Sermon
by John Philip Newman
"Bethink Yourselves!"
by graf Leo Tolstoy