The Literature Book

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reexamines the ideology and power
structures that underpin the
selections of previous generations,
and questions why certain other
works were excluded. Arguably,
studying how literature is created
and testing its place in the canon
may help to make us better readers.
In the same spirit, this book features
many titles that are traditionally
regarded as “great works,” but
explores their place in the wider
story of literature, and within a richer
mix of writing drawn from around
the globe. They sit alongside newer
texts that empower some of the
voices that were silenced over the
centuries by social constructs such
as colonialism and patriarchy, and
Europe’s dominance over literature.

Choosing books
This book takes a chronological
journey through literature, using
more than a hundred books as
guideposts along the route. It
also takes a global approach,
exploring literary texts from a
wide range of different cultures
that many readers may not have
encountered previously.
The Literature Book’s chosen
works are either exemplars of a
particular writing style or technique,
or represent a group or movement
that took a new direction, which

was then adopted by other
contemporary writers or expanded
upon by future generations. The
works are arranged chronologically
to highlight the emergence of
literary innovations against the
social and political backdrop of
their times. For example, during
the 17th and 18th century, French
literature evolved from Molière’s
neoclassical comedies of manners
into Voltaire’s satirical undermining
of Enlightenment optimism, and
later into a savage depiction of
decadent French aristocracy shown
in Pierre Choderlos de Laclos’ Les
Liaisons Dangereuses, published
in the lead-up to the French
Revolution. These changes in
literature inevitably overlap as
writers pioneered techniques that

took time to enter the mainstream,
while others continued literary
traditions from previous eras.
Lists are always contentious;
arguably the hundred or so books
chosen here could be replaced
with a hundred others, many
times over. They are not presented
as a definitive list of “must reads,”
instead each work is framed by a
focus or context that is supported
by a timeline of related literary
milestones and events. Cross-
references link to works of a similar
type, or that have influenced or
been influenced by the book under
discussion, while more than 200
titles are listed for further reading,
exploring the literary landscape
of each period in greater detail.

The story of literature
Around 4,000 years ago, the first
stories to be written down came
in the form of poems such as
Mesopotamia’s The Epic of
Gilgamesh and India’s Mahabharata,
which were based on oral traditions.
Rhyme, rhythm, and meter
were essential aids to memory in
songs and oral accounts, so it is
unsurprising that the first texts
made use of familiar poetic devices.
Many early written texts were
religious, and sacred texts such
as the Bible and the Koran tell ❯❯

INTRODUCTION 13


Some books leave us
free and some books
make us free.
Ralph Waldo Emerson

US_012-015_General_intro.indd 13 08/10/2015 13:

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