Tristram Shandy

novel by Sterne
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Also known as: “The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman”
In full:
The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman

Tristram Shandy, experimental novel by Laurence Sterne, published in nine volumes from 1759 to 1767.

Wildly experimental for its time, Tristram Shandy seems almost a modern avant-garde novel. Narrated by Shandy, the story begins at the moment of his conception and diverts into endless digressions, interruptions, stories-within-stories, and other narrative devices. The focus shifts from the fortunes of the hero himself to the nature of his family, environment, and heredity, and the dealings within that family offer repeated images of human unrelatedness and disconnection. The narrator is isolated in his own privacy and doubts how much, if anything, he can know for certain even about himself. Sterne was explicit about the influence of Lockean psychology on his writing, and the book is filled with characters reinventing or mythologizing the conditions of their own lives. It also toys with the limitations of language and teases an intricate drama out of Shandy’s imagining of, and playing to, the reader’s likely responses. Sterne broke all the rules: events occur out of chronological order, anecdotes are often left unfinished, and sometimes whole pages are filled with asterisks or dashes or are left entirely blank. Sterne is recognized as one of the most important forerunners of psychological fiction.

Sterne himself published volumes one and two at York late in 1759, but he sent half of the imprint to London to be sold. By March, when he went to London, Tristram Shandy was the rage, and he was famous. His London bookseller brought out a second edition and two more volumes of Tristram Shandy, and thereafter Sterne was his own publisher.

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This article was most recently revised and updated by Kathleen Kuiper.