Synopses & Reviews
In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, popular works of literature attracted as they attract today sequels, prequels, franchises, continuations, and parodies. Sequels of all kinds demonstrate the economic realities of the literary marketplace. This represents something fundamental about the way human beings process narrative information. We crave narrative closure, but we also resist its finality, making such closure both inevitable and inadequate in human narratives. Many cultures incorporate this fundamental ambiguity towards closure in the mythic frameworks that fuel their narrative imaginations. New Testaments: Cognition, Closure and the Figural Logic of the Sequel, 1660-1740 examines both the inevitability and the inadequacy of closure in the sequels to four major works of literature written in England between 1660 and 1740: Paradise Lost, The Pilgrim s Progress, Robinson Crusoe, and Pamela. Each of these works spawned sequels, which while often different from the original works connected themselves through rhetorical strategies that can be loosely defined as figural. Such strategies came directly from the culture s two dominant religious narratives: the Old and New Testaments of the Christian Bible two vastly dissimilar works seen universally as complementary parts of a unified and coherent narrative.
Synopsis
New Testaments examines sequelization in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries from two perspectives: 1) the cognitive perspective, which explores the cognitive and evolutionary foundations of the contradictory desires to produce, and to resist, narrative closure; and 2) the biblical perspective, which explains that the connections between sequels and their original works were often constructed with the same tools that the culture used to forge the Old and New Testaments into a single, coherent narrative.