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Daniel Defoe (literary Criticism). Daniel Defoe used realism to enhance his
novel, Robin Crusoe. Many critics agree with this statement ...
Daniel Defoe (literary Criticism). Daniel Defoe used realism to enhance his
novel, Robin Crusoe. Many critics agree with this statement ...
... Since the extent of literary criticism dedicated to ... unconnected, unmatched.? Some
other literary terms, fictional ... are as follows: Daniel Defoe?s Fortunes ...
... The novels of Daniel Defoe, the first modern novels in English, owe much to ... The romantic
era was also rich in literary criticism and other nonfictional prose. ...
... The literary circle around Pope considered Homer preeminent ... Dramatic Poesy and
Pope?s Essay on Criticism. ... Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe (1719) was the first ...
Submitted by oppapers on January 3, 2001
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Daniel Defoe used realism to enhance his novel, Robin Crusoe. Many critics agree with this statement, while some think that he should have been more accurate with his realism. Critics also found the book to be very enlightening and beneficial to read and they found that it appealed to a very wide variety of people including the rich and poor and the young and old. Last but not least, some critics found that it showed lack of ability to create characters and events.
Daniel Defoe was born to James and Mary Defoe in St. Gates, London in 1660. His family were all Dissenters, also known as Presbyterians. He had a very good education and his father hoped that he would become a minister, but he chose not to. Defoe’s mother died when he was just ten years old, then his father sent him to a boarding school (Moore 1). He was then educated at the Morton Academy (Harvey 215) where \"he was a very good student, and his teacher, the Reverend Me. Norton himself, would later show up as a character in some of Daniel’s fiction\". One year later he married Mary Tuffley and also \"joined the army of the rebel Duke of Monmouth, who were attempting to take the throne from James II\". The rebellion ended up a failure and as a result he and many other troops were semi-exiled from the country (Moore 1).
By 1692, Daniel had gone bankrupt and \"ended up owing over 17,000 pounds, and though he paid off all but 5,000 pounds within ten years, he was never free of debt\" (Moore 1). Then, writing started to become big part of him. \"In 1701, he wrote poem called The True-Born Englishman which became the best-selling poem ever at that time\" (Moore 1). \"In 1706, he returned to Scotland and started up a newspaper in Edinburgh called the Post-Man\" (Moore 2). He was known as \"the father of modern journalism\" (Moore 3). However, the following year \"The Act of Union was made official\" (Moore 2) and as a result he lost his job. In 1719, his first volume of...
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