The fifth volume in the Collected Writings of Charles Brockden Brown presents, for the first time, the entirety of the Historical Sketches, Brown’s final major fiction (1805-1806), along with six earlier fragments. Previously accessible only in scattered sources, archives, and to specialized readers, the Sketches are here assembled in a single volume and edited for the first time, while four of the six fragments are transcribed from manuscripts and likewise appear here for the first time. The encyclopedic, formally experimental Sketches are Brown’s final long fiction and represent the culmination of his career long interest in creating a hybrid, historical-fictional genre that explores the contradictions and potentials of the revolutionary age, addressing questions including systems of government and political economy, religion, colonialism and slavery, gender inequality and female subordination, ideology and consent, and historical form itself. The earlier fragments, all preliminary to fictions never fully realized, trace the development of Brown’s interest in historical-fictional forms, Utopia as a genre, and imaginary global topographies. The volume’s historical texts are fully annotated and accompanied by historical and textual essays, as well as an apparatus detailing provenance, publication history, emendations, and corrections. The scholarly work informing the volume establishes significant new findings concerning these texts, which stand alongside the better-known novels as Brown’s most ambitious and significant fictions.
Philip Barnard is Professor of English at the University of Kansas, US.Yvette R. South is Associate Professor of early and nineteenth-century American literature and culture at the College of Saint Benedict and Saint John's University, US.
List of Illustrations AcknowledgmentsI. Uncollected Fragments 1. “Alloa” 2. “Planetron” (c. 1796-98)3. “Medwaye” (c. 1799-1802) 4. “Jessy” (c. 1799-1802) 5. “Harry Wallace” (c. 1796-97)6. “Adini “(c. 1796-98)II. Historical Sketches (c. 1805-06) A. Literary Magazine fragments 1. “A Specimen of Agricultural Improvement”2. “A Specimen of Political Improvement”3. “The Romance of Real Life”4. “The Ivizan Cottager” B. Allen-Dunlap fragments 5. “The lordships of Orme and Walney”6. “Arthur, earl of Orme”7. “St. Arthur Carril was buried” 8. “The abbey at Holioke”9. “The honours of this family”10. “The funds of Carsol”IllustrationsHistorical EssayTextual EssayProper and Names in the “Historical Sketches” Place Names in the “Historical Sketches”Selected BibliographyEnd-line Hyphenation List Index