Enlightenment · Europe · Culture

1719

Robinson Crusoe Published

April 25, 1719

Daniel Defoe, a bankrupt spymaster nearing sixty, published a book about a sailor who had spent years alone on a Pacific island. Readers took it for a true account. It went through four editions in four months and, in time, came to be called the first English novel. Its theme of solitary self-reliance became the founding myth of the colonial imagination for centuries afterward.