The Storytellers
Reading the Masterpieces of Nineteenth-Century Short Fiction
The Storytellers
Reading the Masterpieces of Nineteenth-Century Short Fiction
Tracing the origins of the modern short story, Michael Gorra provides the first fully realized picture of a century’s worth of great tales.
The Storytellers offers a far-reaching account of the rich tradition of short narratives that flourished in nineteenth-century Europe and America, one that both prepared for and eventually gave way to the modern short story. Tracing unexpected resemblances across languages and decades, Michael Gorra restores a wide-angle view of the form in which works usually treated as stand-alone classics reveal themselves as parts of a single, lively conversation.
What unites these tales, Gorra argues, is their blend of novelty and unity. The book’s heart lies in a series of accessible readings of great tales by Herman Melville, Nikolai Gogol, Ivan Turgenev, E. T. A. Hoffmann, Guy de Maupassant, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Arthur Conan Doyle, Sarah Orne Jewett, Charles Chesnutt, and many more. Beyond its consideration of individual works, The Storytellers examines the formal and thematic concerns that bind the century together: the use of frame tales, accounts of social marginality, and an abundance of ghosts and uncanny coincidences. Over time, Gorra shows, these qualities yielded to a cooler realism, with Anton Chekhov as the key transitional figure. His compressed studies of ordinary lives inspired the modern short story and consigned the gothic flourishes of earlier tales to genre fiction.
What do we want from a story? What makes a tale worth telling? The nineteenth-century tale sought not the grand “meaning of life” promised by the novel, Gorra shows, but sudden revelations from singular events. The Storytellers gives readers an incomparable guide to a vast body of tales that still has the power to thrill and entertain.
336 pages | 6 x 9
Literature and Literary Criticism: American and Canadian Literature, British and Irish Literature
Table of Contents
One: An Unprecedented Thing
Two: Novellen
Three: Theories
Four: How Stories Got Short
Five: An English Interlude
Six: The Sportsman at Work
Seven: Local Lives
Eight: A Brief Account of the Long Story
Nine: The Stagecoach from Rouen
Ten: Case Histories
Eleven: Problems, Posed
Twelve: The Storyteller
Acknowledgments
Notes and Sources
Index