Books > Language & Literature > Literature: history & criticism > Literary studies > 16th to 18th centuries
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Sarah Fielding (Hardcover, Annotated edition)
Loot Price: R1,464
Discovery Miles 14 640
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Sarah Fielding (Hardcover, Annotated edition)
Series: Twayne's English author series
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Long of interest to literary scholars as the sister of Henry
Fielding and the friend of Samuel Richardson, Sarah Fielding
(1710-1768) was also a popular and innovative writer in her own
right. In her lifetime Fielding was seen as a leading literary
figure, her experimentation with various literary forms impressing
readers and influencing later writers. Her works encompass five
novels, including the moral romance The Adventures of David Simple
and the philosophical fiction The Cry, as well as one of the
earliest school stories for girls, a pamphlet of literary
criticism, a fictionalized autobiography, and a translation of a
classical Greek text. In her fiction Fielding explores the complex
relationship between words and things and the moral questions
confronting women and men in the middle 18th century; in her time
she staked the claim of the woman writer to help shape the
development of realistic and romantic fiction. Yet despite
increasing attention from scholars in recent years, Sarah Fielding
and her place in English letters have until now received no
full-length critical analysis. Fully conversant with the array of
pertinent critical scholarship, Bree incorporates into her
discussion the appraisals of contemporary and later critics,
including the considerable body of writing by feminists and New
Historicists. Fielding's fictions, Bree argues, "reveal a high
degree of originality in both content and technique" and provide "a
new model for women writers...experimenting in different ways with
the conventions and taboos of prose fiction". She also addresses
Fielding's moral and intellectual vision of women as mature human
beings responsible for their own actions and furthers
anappreciation of Fielding that was held in her own day - as "a
radical, original, and entertaining writer whose works challenged
the reader with serious issues of morality and ethics in action".
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