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Wasn't "Uncle Tom's Cabin" a realist novel?
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More of a political melodrama -- and better for it.
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There's a reason Walter Scott was the favorite novelist of the Confederacy by far. Especially since Kipling wasn't a thing yet.
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There are tons of realist novelists.
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Was Zola a pillar of the status quo?
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I came here to say this.
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First of all, Sir Walter Scott wrote realist novels? Please... This shows the sloppiness of Wells's argument. The absurd oversimplification, the sweeping generalization.
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Except Wells doesn't use the world realist. What's revealed here is the sloppiness of Heer's argument, not Wells.
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Second, the "realist novel" in 19th-20th centuries was hardly a single homogenous mass of material. Quite a lot of variety, open to many varied interpretations. Part of its lasting strength was this ongoing flexibility.
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