A Probable State: The Novel, the Contract, and the Jews

Front Cover
University of Chicago Press, Nov 15, 2000 - Education - 311 pages
Why has the realist novel been persistently understood as promoting liberalism? Can this tendency be reconciled with an equally familiar tendency to see the novel as a national form? In A Probable State, Irene Tucker builds a revisionary argument about liberalism and the realist novel by shifting the focus from the rise of both in the eighteenth century to their breakdown at the end of the nineteenth. Through a series of intricate and absorbing readings, Tucker relates the decline of realism and the eroding logic of liberalism to the question of Jewish characters and writers and to shifting ideas of community and nation.

Whereas previous critics have explored the relationship between liberalism and the novel by studying the novel's liberal characters, Tucker argues that the liberal subject is represented not merely within the novel, but in the experience of the novel's form as well. With special attention to George Eliot, Henry James, Oliver Wendell Holmes, and S. Y. Abramovitch, Tucker shows how we can understand liberalism and the novel as modes of recognizing and negotiating with history.
 

Contents

Introduction
1
Daniel Deronda and the Fictions of Belief
33
Realism Liberalism and the Ends of Contract
123
S Y Abramovitch and the Making of Hebrew Vernacular
183
Bibliography
291
Index
303
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2000)

Irene Tucker is associate professor of English at the University of California, Irvine.