One of fiction’s more irreverent and likable characters, the title character of Henry Fielding’s Tom Jones has entertained readers and viewers of the multiple dramatic forms he later assumed for centuries. What has become familiar to 21st-century readers proved an… Read More ›
18th century British literature
Analysis of Elizabeth Inchbald’s A Simple Story
In Elizabeth Inchbald’s traditional story of forbidden love, a Catholic priest named Dorriforth loves his Protestant ward, Miss Milner, a character who in her youth had been indulged “to the extreme of folly.” Inchbald’s career as an actress informs the… Read More ›
Analysis of Tobias Smollett’s Roderick Random
Tobias Smollett’s first novel reflected both the reading interests of the day and Smollett’s own attitude toward fiction. As a picaresque with first-person narration, the novel offered readers an action-centered story with a rogue main character, but Roderick Random could… Read More ›
Analysis of Samuel Johnson’s History of Rasselas
Most critics note that Samuel Johnson’s History of Rasselas, Prince of Abyssinia is as much essay, parable, and cautionary tale as novel. Johnson sought to counter the popular optimistic philosophy supported by the French Rousseau and German Leibnitz, which held… Read More ›
Analysis of Daniel Defoe’s A Journal of the Plague Year
While it purports to be a journal, Daniel Defoe’s novel, A Journal of the Plague Year, is an imaginatively drawn “history” of the Great Plague that seized England from 1664 to 1665. Defoe likely based his narrator, a Whitechapel saddler… Read More ›
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