ABSTRACT

This excerpted essay investigates how Anthony Trollope’s fictional world-making employs representations of feelings about the self and others through narrated monologue, psycho-narration, externalized narration, and intermental thought report. It employs cognitive narratology to reveal the sources of Trollope’s affective accomplishment, first described in detail by Henry James, to whose commentary this essay returns in conclusion. References appear in the volume’s Works Cited.