Joseph Andrews is Fielding's first and funniest novel, a mostly comic parodic response to the huge success of Richardson's Pamela, which it directly references. A Journey from This World to the Next is a Lucianic satire, but with the irreverent distancing element that is characteristic of Fielding's neoclassical writings.
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Joseph Andrews is Fielding's first and funniest novel, a mostly comic parodic response to the huge success of Richardson's Pamela, which it directly references. A Journey from This World to the Next is a Lucianic satire, but with the irreverent distancing element that is characteristic of Fielding's neoclassical writings.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781443819039
Publisert
2019-06-01
Utgiver
Vendor
CSP Classic Texts
Høyde
212 mm
Bredde
148 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
500

Forfatter

Biographical note

Henry Fielding was born in Somerset in 1707, of an aristocratic family, and educated at Eton and in the law at London. Disputed inheritance leaving him short of money, he sought a living as a playwright, writing 25 plays between 1728 and 1737, across a wide generic range, though his biggest successes were satirical, notably The Tragedy of Tragedies (1730-1). This career was cut short by the introduction of theatre censorship, and Fielding both continued his legal studies and edited comic-political journals. A gift for parody led him to start writing novels in response to the huge success of Richardson's Pamela, Joseph Andrews (1742) openly referring to the former. It was followed by Jonathan Wild, Tom Jones and Amelia; the four have earned Fielding the reputation of 'the father of the modern novel'. They are characterised by scathing social critique, impatience with hypocrisy, literary incompetence and pretension, and ambitious but scrupulous plotting. Fielding was appointed a Justice of the Peace for Middlesex and Westminster in 1748, and many of his later works are essays connected with the social abuses he sought to counter in that post; he was also responsible for establishing Britain's first police force. Henry Fielding died in 1754 in Lisbon, where he had travelled for his health.