Academic literature on the topic 'Richardson, Samuel, 1689-1761. Clarissa'

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Journal articles on the topic "Richardson, Samuel, 1689-1761. Clarissa"

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Scheuer, J. L., and J. E. Bowman. "The Health of the Novelist and Printer Samuel Richardson (1689–1761): A Correlation of Documentary and Skeletal Evidence." Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 87, no. 6 (June 1994): 352–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/014107689408700616.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Richardson, Samuel, 1689-1761. Clarissa"

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Rain, David Christopher. "The death of Clarissa : Richardson's Clarissa and the critics." Title page, contents and summary only, 1988. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09PH/09phr154.pdf.

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Bobbitt, Curtis W. "Internal and external editors of Samuel Richardson's Clarissa." Virtual Press, 1989. http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/720152.

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Samuel Richardson's second novel, Clarissa: or, The History of a Young Lady, one of the longest novels in English, has appeared in dozens of significantly different editions, many of them abridgments. This study examines the means by which Richardson and later editors altered the text of Clarissa, primarily by working with three variables: its epistolary format, its length, and its explicit moral lessons.The first half of the study reviews relevant scholarly research and traces Richardson's uses of internal editors in his four editions of the novel. Richardson's omniscient editor, the most visible and conventional of the internal editors of ClarissR, operates both inside and outside the epistolary framework of the novel. Inside, the editorial voice adds identifying tags to letters and summarizes missing letters. Outside, the editor emphasizes moral elements of the novel by means of a preface and postscript, numerous footnotes, a list of principal characters, and a judgmental table of contents. Richardson expanded the role of this editor in each of his successive editions.Richardson's mastery of the epistolary format further appears in his use of all the major correspondents as internal editors. Jack Belford operates most visibly, assembling correspondence to and from Clarissa and Lovelace to vindicate Clarissa's memory and instruct possible readers. Belford's Conclusion serves a similar function to the nameless editor's preface and postscript. Richardson also gave Clarissa, Anna Howe, and Lovelace editorial tasks, including introducing and summarizing letters, footnoting, and altering letters before showing them to someone other than the intended recipient.Each major correspondent also has a unique individual editorial function.The study's second half analyzes and compares seven abridgments of Clarissa published between 1868 and 1971, concluding that all seven drastically change the novel (yet in differing fashions) despite their retention of its plot and epistolary format.All seven external editors alter Richardson's stated intentions. Four variables shape the comparison: stated editorial intent, omissions, alterations, and additions. An appendix lists the contents of all seven abridgments by individual letter.
Department of English
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McLachlan, Dorice. "Clarissa's triumph." Thesis, McGill University, 1994. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=68120.

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This thesis examines Richardson's representation in Clarissa of the heroine's triumphant death. It considers Clarissa's triumph in relation to the implicit doctrine of freedom of the will and the constitution of the self. Clarissa and Lovelace represent the uncontrollable freedom of the human will and exemplify its potentiality either to choose the good or to subject itself to the desire for power and self-gratification. Chapter one of this thesis discusses Clarissa in relation to the theories of several current literary theoreticians whose work constitutes a response to Kant's ideas on freedom and ethical decisions. The remaining chapters seek through close reading and interpretation of key scenes in the novel to understand what Richardson meant to represent through Clarissa's triumphant death. The argument reassesses Richardson's use of exemplary figures to embody his spiritual and moral ideas. It addresses the problem of ambiguity in Clarissa's forgiveness of her persecutors. Richardson's representation of Clarissa's triumph has both worldly and spiritual aspects. Acting always in accordance with principled choice (second-order evaluations), Clarissa resists all attempts to subjugate her; she reconstitutes her identity to become a Christian heroine. She achieves spiritual transcendence through penitence for her errors, forgiveness of those who have injured her and complete resignation to the will of God. Lovelace's misuse of free will and his refusal to relinquish his libertine identity and reform lead to his final worldly and spiritual defeat. Through their lives and deaths Clarissa and Lovelace demonstrate that individuals are responsible for the choices they make, for the identities they establish, and that they must accept the consequences of their choices.
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Lesueur, Christophe. "Poétique et économie de la communication dans Clarissa de Samuel Richardson." Thesis, Toulouse 2, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011TOU20020.

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Le problème de la communication, et pas seulement du danger des liaisons, est au cœur du roman épistolaire de manière générale et de Clarissa de Samuel Richardson en particulier. Sans cesse menacée d'interruption, la communication représentée dans la diégèse du deuxième roman de Richardson influe également sur le sens et relève à ce titre de ce que Janet Altman a appelé l'épistolarité. Cette étude se concentre sur le code de la communication représentée dans l'œuvre et saisit la lettre dans l’économie de l’information toute particulière dont elle participe, à la croisée d'une communication interne entre ses personnages et des exigences d'une communication externe qui voit le matériau épistolaire affluer vers le Lecteur. Elle s'efforce de souligner à quel point le scénario romanesque est informé par la nature des communications au travers desquelles il s’exprime ainsi qu'à travers les communications auxquelles il donne lieu (Clarissa étant l'objet d'âpres négociations entre son auteur et ses lecteurs), tout comme il informe à son tour la nature de ces communications. L'examen de la communication dans et autour du roman de Richardson met en évidence l'existence d'une poétique qui est aussi une économie. L'histoire de Clarissa n'est pas tant l'histoire de ses lettres que celle de ses communications
The problem of communication, and not only that of the danger of the liaisons, is at the heart of the epistolary novel in general and of Samuel Richardson's Clarissa in particular. Constantly threatened with interruption, the communication represented in the diegesis of Richardson's second novel also informs meaning and thus belongs to what Janet Altman called epistolarity. This study concentrates on the code of communication represented in the work and endeavors to grasp the letter in its particular economy of communication, at the crossroads of internal communication between its characters and the demands of an external communication that requires that the epistolary material be oriented towards the reader. This study strives to underline to what extent the novelistic scenario is informed by the nature of the communications through which it expresses itself as well as by the communications it produces among its readers in the shape of letters to the author. The examination of communication in and around Richardson's novel bears witness to the existence of a poetics that is also an economy. The history of Clarissa is not so much that of its letters as that of its communications
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Maia, Ludmila de Souza 1984. "Os descaminhos de Clarissa entre o campo e a cidade = o romance de Samuel Richardson e a Sociedade inglesa do século XVIII." [s.n.], 2011. http://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/279017.

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Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Filosofia e Ciências Humanas
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Resumo: Este trabalho se dedica ao estudo do romance epistolar 'Clarissa, or the history of a young lady', de autoria do inglês Samuel Richardson, publicado entre os de anos 1747-48. O propósito é realizar uma pesquisa historiográfica através da interpretação da narrativa literária. A obra, objeto deste estudo, recria muitas das tensões sociais, políticas e religiosas latentes na sociedade inglesa do século XVIII. Os percalços vividos pela heroína da trama, entre o campo e a cidade, permitem analisar as relações sociais e de gênero da Inglaterra das Luzes. A trama conta a história de Clarissa, donzela d aristocracia rural inglesa que recebe a herança do avô, motivando disputas familiares. O primogênito preterido convence a família a casá-la com um homem odioso, para evitar sua independência e lucrar com o negócio. Clarissa se recusa ao matrimônio e passa a ser perseguida dentro de casa. Para escapar da tirania, ela foge para Londres com Lovelace, libertino que lhe faz a corte contra a vontade de sua família. Seu desejo de autonomia é interrompido quando seu raptor a aprisiona num bordel e a violenta. Para preservar sua vontade de virtude e a independência de seu espírito, Clarissa escolhe a morte como única saída moral possível. Com efeito, meu objetivo foi entender aquela sociedade a partir das páginas do romance, cuja análise, também, derivou de questões e referências exteriores à trama
Abstract: This work is dedicated to the novel 'Clarissa, or the history of a Young lady', written by Samuel Richardson, and published in 1747-48. My purpose was to make a historiographic research by using a literary narrative. This novel creates, in a literary way, many of the most important social, political, and religious conflicts of the Eighteenth Century English society. The mishaps of the life of the novel's protagonist, between the country and the city, allowed me to analyze the social and gender relations in the Enlightenment England. The plot tells us the story of Clarissa, an aristocratic maiden in rural England. She inherits an estate from her grandfather, which provokes a familiar disturbance. The deprecated old brother convinces the family to marry her to an odious man, to avoid her independence and to profit from the business. She refuses the marriage and her persecution begins at home. In order to escape from tyranny, she fled to London with the libertine Lovelace, who courts her against her family's will. Her wish for autonomy is interrupted when his abductor imprisons and rapes in a brothel. She wishes virtue and an independent soul, and that's why she chooses death, as the only possible way to maintain her moral intact. Indeed, my goal with this research was to understand the mentioned society from the pages of the novel,whose analysis also comes from questions and references external to the plot
Mestrado
Politica, Memoria e Cidade
Mestre em História
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Tane, Benoît. "“ Avec figures. . . ”. Roman et illustration au XVIIIe siècle : Marivaux, "La Vie de Marianne", Richardson, "Clarissa", Rousseau, "Julie ou La Nouvelle Héloïse", Rétif de la Bretonne, "Le Paysan perverti"." Montpellier 3, 2004. http://www.theses.fr/2004MON30049.

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Le roman illustré du XVIIIe siècle est une forme particulière de l'illustration et un cas exemplaire du rapport texte/image: les éditeurs-libraires européens commandaient des dessins, gravés sur cuivre au burin et à l'eau-forte puis insérés dans des ouvrages avec figures ou rassemblés en recueils d'estampes. Dépassant la bibliophilie des XVIIIe et XIXe siècles, de même que les approches rhétoriques et linguistiques qui rapportent l'image au texte (allégorie, système de l'image et mise en série des images), l'étude sémiologique du livre illustré met en évidence sa dimension visuelle en articulant le jeu des corps, des regards et de l'espace dans le texte et dans l'image, notamment dans les tableaux et les scènes. Notre approche figurale veut cerner ce qui travaille la représentation romanesque et l'imagination du lecteur-spectateur; sont explorés successivement quatre romans (Marivaux, La Vie de Marianne; Richardson, Clarissa, traduite par l'abbé Prévost sous le titre de Clarisse Harlove; Rousseau, Julie ou La Nouvelle Héloïse; Rétif de la Bretonne, Le Paysan perverti) et les séries d'illustrations publiées dans leurs éditions en français entre 1736 et 1788 (d'après Schley, Chevaux, Cochin, Gravelot, Eisen, Moreau le Jeune, Chodowiecki, Binet. . . ), complétées par d'autres images (Wale, Stothard, Johannot, Staal. . . ); le dispositif de la représentation s'appuie sur un espace double cristallisant les enjeux symboliques de ces œuvres: identité de Marianne, vertu de Clarisse, réunion de Julie et de Saint-Preux, perversion d'Edmond. Lettres et estampes du roman épistolaire participent du montage du texte et de l'image qui fait entrevoir ce que le texte refuse ou échoue à dire
The 18th century illustrated novel is not only a particular feature of illustration, it also reveals text/image relations. Indeed european booksellers and publishers commitionned line engravings and etchings, inserted in books sold avec figures (with plates) or collected in volumes. Without ignoring the 18th and 19th century bibliophily nor the rhetorical and linguistic perspectives comparing image with text (allegory, iconic system, iconic paradigm), the semiotic study underlines the visuel aspect of illustrated books, thus exploring links between looks, bodies and spaces in text and image, especially in tableaux (pictures) and scenes. Our figural study is an attempt to define the issue of representation at stake in those works and to grasp the workings of reader-spectator's imagination. We analyse four novels (Marivaux, La Vie de Marianne; Richardson, Clarissa, translated by the Abbé Prévost as Clarisse Harlove; Rousseau, Julie ou La Nouvelle Héloïse; Rétif de la Bretonne, Le Paysan perverti), the series of illustrations published in their editions in french between 1736 and 1788 (after Schley, Chevaux, Cochin, Gravelot, Eisen, Moreau le Jeune, Chodowiecki, Binet. . . ) as well as other images (Wale, Stothard, Johannot, Staal. . . ). The device of representation is based on a double space focusing on symbolic questions of the novels: Marianne's identity, Clarissa's virtue, reunion between Julie and Saint-Preux, Edmond's perversion. Letters and engravings in the illustrated epistolary novel belong to the montage (setting) of text and image, which shows what the text refuses or fails to express
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Richter, Josef. "Libertinage littéraire en Angleterre, en France et en Allemagne (1751-1804). Etude de trois romans épistolaires : clarisse Harlove de Richardson, Les Liaisons dangereuses de Laclos et Menander und Glycerion de Wieland." Thesis, Paris 4, 2010. http://www.theses.fr/2010PA040083.

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« Je ne vois pas pourquoi on blâmerait une fille comme Nanette, de profiter, pour mettre le plus haut prix à sa personne et à son art, de la folie et du désordre extrême de vos riches libertins ? » - s’interroge la Leontion de Wieland. Ce « désordre extrême » n’est qu’une des caractéristiques de l’existence insouciante exprimant le triomphe du libertinage des mœurs à l’époque où l’attirance des sociétés européennes pour la conduite libertine, réelle ou imaginaire, trouve son reflet dans les littératures anglaise, française et allemande. La présente thèse démontre ainsi la diversité du libertinage littéraire en Europe dans la seconde moitié du dix-huitième siècle. Les romans épistolaires Clarisse Harlove de Richardson en Angleterre, Les Liaisons dangereuses de Laclos en France et Menander und Glycerion de Wieland en Allemagne nous ont paru les meilleurs exemples afin d’esquisser cette diversité et d’en comparer les aspects. Le regard que les trois auteurs portent sur les lois de l’ordre social, la religion et les mœurs traduit une vision originale du monde. Et bien que cette vision ne dépasse pas le cadre de la fiction romanesque, l’étude de leurs œuvres met en relief un certain nombre de données propres au climat sociopolitique de l’époque tout comme des éléments autobiographiques ayant contribué à l’élaboration du modèle qui est le leur du libertin masculin ou féminin. Notre objectif est d’étudier la richesse littéraire de ce modèle de libertins et de leur conduite, d’ailleurs propre aux deux sexes, sa complexité et sa singularité en procédant par rapprochements et contrastes, similitudes et différences
“I don’t see why a girl like Nanette should be blamed for profiting from the madness and extreme disorderly conduct of your libertines, in order to set the highest price to her person and her art,” Wieland’s Leontion says to herself. This “extreme disorderly conduct” is only one of the characteristics of that kind of carefree existence which is an expression of the triumph of libertine mores at a time when the fascination of European societies for libertinism, whether real or imaginary, is reflected in English, French and German Literature. The following thesis thus demonstrates the diversity of libertine literature in Europe in the second half of the XVIIIth century. In order to analyse this diversity and compare its different aspects, I have chosen three epistolary novels that I consider to be paradigms in the matter: Clarissa Harlowe by Richardson in England, Les Liaisons dangereuses by Laclos in France and Menander und Glycerion by Wieland in Germany. The implicit or explicit judgement that these three authors pass on the laws of social order, on religion, and on the mores of the period is emblematic of an original vision of the world. Although this vision is expressed within the limits of works of fiction, the study of these works highlights a number of elements that are specific to the social and political atmosphere of the time, as well as certain autobiographical elements which have contributed to the social paradigm of feminine and masculine libertinism to which they subscribe. The purpose of this thesis is to study these literary works as rich sources of information on the libertines and their conduct as an accepted social model for men and women alike, and to discuss the complexity and singular nature of this phenomenon by a differential treatment of the various themes through which it can be identified
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Ghabris, Maryam. "Les passions dans les romans de Samuel Richardson." Paris 3, 1990. http://www.theses.fr/1990PA030098.

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Les passions, que fustigent les philosophes depuis les anciens grecs, les prédicateurs et les romanciers, constituent le thème essentiel des romans de Samuel Richardson. Il les développe, de l'amour à la haine du moi, depuis leur éveil jusqu'à leurs excès et leurs conséquences. Favorisées par le tempérament anglais et par la condition de la femme considérée comme l'objet prometteur des passions des hommes, les passions sont à l'origine des vices de la société du dix-huitième siècle qui n'apportent que souffrance et malheur. Richardson défend la femme et prône chez les deux sexes la chasteté, la délicatesse, la sensibilité et l'amour du prochain. Il met en garde deux qui, abuses par leurs passions, oublient que la vie temporelle n'est qu'une vie probatoire en vue de la vie éternelle; il les encourage à se reformer par le repentir avant que le destin ne les surprenne dans une mort prématurée. Richardson, moraliste chrétien, conseille une éducation fondée sur l'obéissance à la loi morale et sur l'adhésion à la foi en dieu. Richardson, romancier, analyste du coeur humain, fait pénétrer le lecteur dans les profondeurs de l'inconscient de ses personnages, par le biais d'une composition habile, aux intrigues bien construites, aux dialogues vivants et au style qui donne à l'expression des passions une authenticité jamais atteinte jusqu'ici. Chantre de la raison et de la sensibilité, Richardson servira de modèle aux romanciers et son oeuvre donnera le ton au roman sentimental
Passions, criticised by the greeks, preachers and novelists, are the essential themes in the novels of Samuel Richardson. He develops these, from one extreme passion to the other, from their awakenings to their excesses and their consequences. Favoured by the english temperament, and by the condition of the woman considered as the promising object of men, passions are the sources of the vices of eighteenth-century bringing suffering and calamity. Richardson defends the woman and commends chastity, delicacy, sensibility and generosity for both sexes. He warns those who, misled by their passions, forget that temporal life is not but a life of trial if compared to eternal life. Richardson encourages men to change their ways by repenting before destiny surprizes them by an untimely death. Richardson, a christian moralist, advises an education based on obeying the moral code and an adhesion to faith in god. As a novelist and an analyst of the human heart, he invites the reader to penetrate into the subconscious of his characters in his shillful composition, well-constructed plots, lively dialogues and a style which gives to the expression of passions an authenticity never before attained. Eulogist of reason and sensibility, Richardson served a model for women novelists and his work gave a tone to the sentimental novel
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Maaouni, Jamila. "Les personnages des romans de Samuel Richardson : (1689-1761) : le héros et le double." Paris 3, 1992. http://www.theses.fr/1992PA030092.

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Le foisonnement des personnages dans les romans de samuel richardson est tel qu'il invite a definir une problematique qui soit a la fois reflet de la conscience du romancier a l'oeuvre dans la creation litteraire et transposition ou distanciation critique. Certe, l'intention premiere du romancier des d'instruire son lecteur. Mais les personnages de ses romans ont aussi d'autres fonctions, moins apparentes, et les ressorts qui les animent relevent souvent du non-dit. Il s'agit donc de nrespecter a la fois le dessein moralisateur du romancier en examinant les attitudes de ses personnages devant la societe tout en elucidant le sens des silences et du non-dit qui emaillent, de facon paradoxale, ces romans prolixes et qui revelent, peut-etre davantage, l'essence de l'esprit createur a l'oeuvre dans la peinture des personnages. L'etude du personnage pose des problemes qui sont encore loin d'etre resolus. Un examne des relations gemellaires entre les protagonistes et leurs correspondants permet de degager des lois susceptibles de devoiler des aspects contradictoires du romancier. L'unite structurale de la trilogie depend des personnages narrateurs qui se repondent d'un roman a l'autre, comme en echo
The multiplicity of characters in richardson's novels is such that it calls for a definition of the field of research. The present study aims at giving both a reflection of the novelist's conscience at work within the literary creation and a transposition or critical distancing. The novelist's primary aim is to instruct and edify his reader. But his characters also have other functions and more hidden motives. The relationships between richardson's characters and the society in which they live are charged with meaning. However, paradoxically, the silences and tacit assumptions peppered in these prolix novels are perhaps of greater significance in so far as they reveal the essence of the creative spirit at work in the painting of characters. The study of character poses problems that are far from being resolved. The main interest of an examination of the twin relations between the protagonists and their correspondents in richardson's epistolary novels lies in the fact that they disclose the novelist's contradictory aspects
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Bender, Ashley Brookner. "Samuel Richardson's Revisions to Pamela (1740, 1801)." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2004. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc4638/.

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The edition of Pamela a person reads will affect his or her perception of Pamela's ascent into aristocratic society. Richardson's revisions to the fourteenth edition of Pamela, published posthumously in 1801, change Pamela's character from the 1740 first edition in such a way as to make her social climb more believable to readers outside the novel and to "readers" inside the novel. Pamela alters her language, her actions, and her role in the household by the end of the first edition; in the fourteenth edition, however, she changes in little more than her title. Pamela might begin as a novel that threatens the fabric of class hierarchies, but it ends-both within the plot and externally throughout its many editions-as a novel that stabilizes and strengthens social norms.
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Books on the topic "Richardson, Samuel, 1689-1761. Clarissa"

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Tom, Keymer, ed. Samuel Richardson's published commentary on Clarissa, 1747-65. London: Pickering & Chatto, 1998.

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Richardson's Clarissa and the eighteenth-century reader. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992.

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Rhetorik und Moral in Samuel Richardsons Clarissa: Ein systemtheoretischer Versuch. Bern: P. Lang, 1991.

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How art produces art: Samuel Richardsons Clarissa im Spiegel ihrer deutschen Übersetzungen. Frankfurt am Main: P. Lang, 2000.

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Fulton, Gordon D. Styles of meaning and meanings of style in Richardson's Clarissa. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 1999.

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Clarissa's painter: Portraiture, illustration, and representation in the novels of Samuel Richardson. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009.

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Shepherd, Lynn. Clarissa's painter: Portraiture, illustration, and representation in the novels of Samuel Richardson. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009.

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Beebee, Thomas O. Clarissa on the Continent: Translation and seduction. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1990.

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Lehmann, Christine. Das Modell Clarissa: Liebe, Verführung, Sexualität und Tod der Romanheldinnen des 18. und 19. Jahrhunderts. Stuttgart: J.B. Metzlersche Verlagsbuchh., 1991.

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Bueler, Lois E. Clarissa's plots. Newark: University of Delaware Press, 1994.

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Book chapters on the topic "Richardson, Samuel, 1689-1761. Clarissa"

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McGowan, Ian. "Samuel Richardson 1689–1761." In The Restoration and Eighteenth Century, 269–78. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-60485-2_17.

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Keymer, Thomas. "Samuel Richardson (1689–1761): The epistolary novel." In The Cambridge Companion to European Novelists, 54–71. Cambridge University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ccol9780521515047.005.

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