The Rise of the Novel: Studies in Defoe, Richardson, and Fielding |
Contents
Preface page | 7 |
The reading public and the rise of | 35 |
Robinson Crusoe individualism and | 60 |
8 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
action actual attitude booksellers certainly characters Clarissa comic conscious contemporary course courtly love critical Crusoe's Defoe and Richardson Defoe's Defoe's novels E. M. Forster economic individualism eighteenth century England English epic episode Essay example expression fact Fanny Burney feelings feminine fiction Fielding's formal realism genre Grandison heroine Homer human important irony Jane Austen Jones Joseph Andrews kind labour Lady later least leisure letters literary form literature London Lovelace Lovelace's marriage ment modern Moll Flanders Moll's moral narrative nature novelists outlook Pamela perhaps personal relationships philosophical realism plot present probably problem prose psychological Puritan readers reading public reality reason reflected religious Richardson and Fielding Robinson Crusoe role romance romantic love Samuel Richardson scene sense sexual social society Sophia spiritual story suggests surely tended tendency thought tion Tom Jones tradition Tristram Shandy wholly women words writing wrote