On the Vice of Novel Reading. / Being a brief in appeal, pointing out errors of the lower tribunal.
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About This Book
The essay mounts a spirited defense of novel reading against prevailing moral condemnation, arguing that attacks on fiction mirror a broader suspicion of purely intellectual or aesthetic pursuits. The speaker traces common objections—novels seen as enervating or morally dangerous—and ridicules extremes that would brand canonized imaginative works as crimes, while recounting a library anecdote and a notable defender's concession that many readers seek novels for harmless leisure. Ultimately the piece challenges the narrow view that fictional literature is mere amusement, asserting its cultural and imaginative legitimacy and exposing critics' inconsistency and hypocrisy.
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