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INTERNATIONAL DELIVERY: Please note, the Christmas deadline has now passed and we can no longer guarantee delivery before 25th December 2025.
INTERNATIONAL DELIVERY: Please note, the Christmas deadline has now passed and we can no longer guarantee delivery before 25th December 2025.

The Chapter

Nicholas Dames

A Segmented History from Antiquity to the Twenty-First Century

Barcode 9780691271026
Paperback

Original price £17.43 - Original price £17.43
Original price
£17.43
£17.43 - £17.43
Current price £17.43

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Release Date: 25/02/2025

Genre: Poetry & Drama
Sub-Genre: Literary Criticism
Label: Princeton University Press
Language: English
Publisher: Princeton University Press

A Segmented History from Antiquity to the Twenty-First Century
A history of the chapter from its origins in antiquity to today

Finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award in Criticism
Shortlisted for the Christian Gauss Award, Phi Beta Kappa Society
A history of the chapter from its origins in antiquity to today


Why do books have chapters? With this seemingly simple question, Nicholas Dames embarks on a literary journey spanning two millennia, revealing how an ancient editorial technique became a universally recognized component of narrative art and a means to register the sensation of time.

Dames begins with the textual compilations of the Roman world, where chapters evolved as a tool to organize information. He goes on to discuss the earliest divisional systems of the Gospels and the segmentation of medieval romances, describing how the chapter took on new purpose when applied to narrative texts and how narrative segmentation gave rise to a host of aesthetic techniques. Dames shares engaging and in-depth readings of influential figures, from Sterne, Goethe, Tolstoy, and Dickens to George Eliot, Machado de Assis, B. S. Johnson, Agnès Varda, Uwe Johnson, Jennifer Egan, and László Krasznahorkai. He illuminates the sometimes tacit, sometimes dramatic ways in which the chapter became a kind of reckoning with time and a quiet but persistent feature of modernity.

Ranging from ancient tablets and scrolls to contemporary fiction and film, The Chapter provides a compelling, elegantly written history of a familiar compositional mode that readers often take for granted and offers a new theory of how this versatile means of dividing narrative sculpts our experience of time.