Academic literature on the topic 'Fielding, Henry, 1707-1754'
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Journal articles on the topic "Fielding, Henry, 1707-1754"
McCrea, Brian. "Henry Fielding (1707–1754): Novelist, Playwright, Journalist, Magistrate: A Double Anniversary Tribute ed. by Claude Rawson." Scriblerian and the Kit-Cats 43, no. 2 (2011): 218–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/scb.2011.0146.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Fielding, Henry, 1707-1754"
Budd, Adam. ""Too fond to be here related" : ironic didacticism and the moral analogy in Henry Fielding's Amelia (1751)." Thesis, McGill University, 1997. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=28249.
Full textBarlow, Kathleen P. "Henry Fielding's four journals : the Champion, the True patriot, the Jacobite's journal, the Covent garden journal : on the uses and abuses of language." Virtual Press, 1991. http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/774766.
Full textDepartment of English
Millet, Baudouin Bony Alain. ""Ceci n'est pas un roman" l'évolution du statut de la fiction en Angleterre de 1652 à 1754 /." Lyon : Université Lumière Lyon 2, 2004. http://demeter.univ-lyon2.fr:8080/sdx/theses/lyon2/2004/millet_b.
Full textOgée, Frédéric. "Fielding et l'esthétique : contribution à l'analyse des romans de Henry Fielding à la lumière de l'Analyse de la Beauté de William Hogarth." Paris 10, 1985. http://www.theses.fr/1985PA100036.
Full textMillet, Baudouin. ""Ceci n'est pas un roman" : l'évolution du statut de la fiction en Angleterre de 1652 à 1754." Lyon 2, 2004. http://theses.univ-lyon2.fr/documents/lyon2/2004/millet_b.
Full textThis dissertation explores the theoretical discourses and rhetorical devices used by writers to legitimate fiction at a time when it was considered immoral by moralists and despised by scholars. The use of such discourses and devices is found in titles, prefaces and throughout the narratives themselves ; they are employed to assert that the narratives contain moral truths or to assert their status as fact, thus rendering the narratives acceptable to the readership. The claim to authenticity is asserted by the figure of the narrator-as-witness, who guarantees the veracity of the facts relayed, and, from 1700 onwards, by that of the manuscript editor. Following the publication of Henry Fielding's Joseph Andrews in 1742, the fiction of the period begins to flaunt its own fictionality, marking the emergence of self-reflexive fiction
Bowen, Michael John. "Uncertain affections : representations of trust in the British sentimental novel of the eighteenth century." Thesis, McGill University, 2001. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=38158.
Full textMy work explores this dual shift in three sentimental novels. It first analyzes Samuel Richardson's Pamela (1740) and contends that Richardson denies the concept of honor its epistemological role in practical deliberations. The denial of the epistemology of honor uncouples the mechanism of personal trust from assessments of role and role performance and thus makes the trust in persons in the intimate sphere less dependent on institutional forms of trust. To replace honor's role in the formation of trust, Richardson proposes that the sentiments can provide reliable grounds for trust in the intimate sphere. However, he denies the sentiments a role in the formation of an encompassing social trust among strangers and mere acquaintances. The thesis proceeds to read Henry Fielding's Amelia (1751). In order to argue that Fielding envisioned divergent grounds for trust relations, it maintains that Fielding considers trust relations in the intimate sphere and trust relations in public life as based on the sentiments and fair distribution respectively. To conclude, the thesis investigates Oliver Goldsmith's The Vicar of Wakefield (1766) to uncover the manner in which Goldsmith distinguishes personal trust in the intimate sphere from general system trust, which Goldsmith ultimately envisions as an ontological trust in providence.
Vasset, Sophie. "Décrire, prescrire, guérir : correspondances entre discours médical et discours fictionnel 1719-1771." Paris 7, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006PA070076.
Full textThis study of Eighteenth-Century fiction and medicine (1719-1771) aims at presenting an interdisciplinary analysis of both discourses. Daniel Defoe, Samuel Richardson, Henry Fielding, Tobias Smollett and Laurence Sterne use some elements of the medical discourse to justify their literary enterprise. They tend to argue that fiction can prevent the reader against vice, or even cure him. To study how medical and fictional discourse interact with each other, this analysis follows the tree steps of the medical process—description, prescription and treatment. The description of life—so essential to the medical thought—is becoming the vital concern of realistic fiction, which assimilates some medical principles such as circulation. Many prescriptive strategies are enacted by authors of fiction and medical doctors who write about domestic life, suggesting some proper ways of dealing with one's body. Finally, both fiction and medicine offer to cure through movement, by exercising and purging, thinking and laughing. Corrosive satirical laughs are assimilated to a certain healing violence often associated with the medical treatment
Stamoulis, Derek Clarence. "In pursuit of virtue : the moral education of readers in eighteenth-century fiction." Thesis, 1991. http://hdl.handle.net/2440/110493.
Full textBooks on the topic "Fielding, Henry, 1707-1754"
Hardy, Barbara Nathan. Henry James: The later writing. Plymouth, U.K: Northcote House, in association with the British Council, 1996.
Find full textPaulson, Ronald. The life of Henry Fielding: A critical biography. Malden, Mass: Blackwell, 2000.
Find full textR, Battestin Ruthe, ed. Henry Fielding: A life. London: Routledge, 1989.
Find full textJulien, Rawson Claude, ed. Henry Fielding (1707-1754): Novelist, playwright, journalist, magistrate : a double anniversary tribute. University of Delaware Press: Newark, 2008.
Find full textNokes, David. Henry Fielding, Joseph Andrews. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1987.
Find full textHertsig, Ḥanah. ha-ʻOlam ba-siporet: Ḥiḳui metsiʼut o irgun omanuti? Ramat-Aviv, Tel-Aviv: ha-Universiṭah ha-petuḥah, 1989.
Find full textauthor, Hanauer Nick, ed. The true patriot. Seattle, Washington: True Patriot Network, 2007.
Find full textFielding, Henry. An institute of the pleas of the Crown: An exhibition of the Hyde Collection at the Houghton Library, 1987. [Cambridge, MA: Houghton Library], 1987.
Find full textPotter, Tiffany. Honest sins: Georgian libertinism and the plays and novels of Henry Fielding. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 1999.
Find full textBrooks-Davies, Douglas. Fielding, Dickens, Gosse, Iris Murdoch, and Oedipal Hamlet. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1989.
Find full textBook chapters on the topic "Fielding, Henry, 1707-1754"
Lockwood, Thomas. "Henry Fielding (1707–1754): The comic epic in prose." In The Cambridge Companion to European Novelists, 72–88. Cambridge University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ccol9780521515047.006.
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