Psychological
novel
A psychological novel is a work of prose fiction which places
more than the usual amount of emphasis on interior characterization,
and on the motives, circumstances, an internal action which
springs from, and develops, external action. The psychological
novel is not content to state what happens but goes on to
explain the why and the wherefore of this action. In this
type of writing character and characterization are more than
usually important.
The origins of the psychological novel can be traced as far
back as Giovanni Boccaccio's 1344 La Fiammetta; that is before
the term psychology was coined.
Another avant la lettre example is Don Quixote de la Mancha
by Miguel Cervantes.
The first rise of the psychological novel as a genre is said
to have started with the sentimental novel of which Samuel
Richardson's Pamela is a prime example.
In French literature, Stendhal's The Red and the Black is
often called an early psychological novel.
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