The Impossible Observer: Reason and the Reader in 18th Century ProseUniversity Press of Kentucky, 1979 |
Contenido
Swift and the Problematical Nature | 9 |
Mandeville and the Force of Prejudice | 28 |
Defoe Deliverance and Dissimulation | 46 |
Clarissa Amelia and the State | 71 |
Johnsons Equipoise and the State of Man | 89 |
Sternes Sixth Sense | 108 |
Moral and Tendency in Caleb Williams | 123 |
Criticism and the Idea of Nature | 137 |
Términos y frases comunes
actions activity affective appeal Amelia argued argument assumptions believe Bernard Mandeville Caleb Williams characters Clarendon Press Clarissa complicated conclusion consciousness conventional critical Defoe Defoe's fiction deliverance desire detached observation dissimulation distinction effect enact equipoise essay evil examine example expectations Fable fact Falkland Fielding's Godwin Gulliver's Travels Hereafter cited Houyhnhnms idea of nature imagination Imlac impossible observer innocence latent fiction literary literature Lovelace Mandeville Mandeville's manifest fiction meaning mind Modest Proposal Moll Flanders Moll's moral predicaments Moreover narrative novel Oxford Paradise Lost participation passage Paul Hunter political Pope probation problematical prose psychological Rambler Rasselas rational reader reader's experience reading reason response Robinson Crusoe Roxana Samuel Johnson Samuel Richardson satire Savage Savage's secular sentence simply sixth sense social Sterne Sterne's story suggests Swift Tale tendency term thing tion Tristram Shandy trunk truth understanding University Press virtue wants wish writing
Referencias a este libro
Framing Feeling: Sentiment and Style in English Prose Fiction, 1745-1800 Barbara M. Benedict Vista de fragmentos - 1994 |