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The Storm

Gelesen von Denny Sayers (d. 2015)

(2,5 Sterne; 3 Bewertungen)

The Storm (1704) holds a special place in the writings of Daniel Defoe. Widely considered a founding document of modern journalism, The Storm narrates the calamitous events of November 1703 that are framed by the author in the first four chapters. These are followed by verbatim eyewitness accounts, solicited from survivors through a newspaper advertisement that Defoe placed shortly after the hurricane struck. Defoe is primarily known for his later fiction, loosely based on historical calamities, such as his Journal of the Plague Year (1722), and by fictionalized novels purporting to be first-person accounts, including Robinson Crusoe (1719) and Moll Flanders (1722). It can be argued that The Storm was the journalistic crucible in which the master realist Defoe forged his later novelistic artistry, with its penchant for "the telling detail." In fact, his fiction novel The Plague Year remains a required reading for journalism students to this day, side-by-side with the non-fiction account of The Storm. –Denny Sayers (9 hr 8 min)

Chapters

Preface

20:58

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Chapter 1

24:38

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Chapter 2

22:17

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Chapter 3

43:42

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Ch. 4 - Of the Extent of this Storm

27:21

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Ch. 4 - 'Tis very observable

19:44

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Of the Effects of the Storm, Damages in the City of London

26:32

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Of the Effects of the Storm, Damages in the Country

35:26

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The following Letters, tho' in a homely stile

34:42

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From Littleton in Worcestershire

26:43

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At Brenchly in the Western Parts of Kent

28:43

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It has been impossible to give an exact relation

27:39

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Of the Damages on the Water

34:03

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From Newport and Hastings the following Accounts

35:44

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Nor can the Damage suffered in the River of Thames be forgot

36:58

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Of the Damage to the Navy & Of the Earthquake

27:19

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Of remarkable Deliverances

29:59

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Another great Preservation

17:39

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The two following Letters & The Conclusion

28:51

Read by Denny Sayers (d. 2015)