ABSTRACT The eighteenth century is also called the ’ Age of Reason ’ as the thinkers and writers of this period thought and expressed their views rationally. The writers aimed at reforming the society and therefore, through long fictional narratives exposed excesses and moral corruption. With the emergence of the middle class, the readership had shifted from elite to middle class. The writers made use of wit and satire in their stories to make them appealing to the common man who was self-made and self-reliant. For this purpose, the writers of this period adapted a collection of techniques known “formal realism, ” to represent a more particular and circumstantial view of life. In this paper an attempt is made to study Samuel Richardson’s Pa...
This study examines concepts of morality and structures of domestic relationships in Samuel Richards...
This study provides a new account of the evolution of the eighteenth-century British novel by readin...
In his preface to Clarissa, Richardson warns parents against the "abuse of their natural authority" ...
ABSTRACT The eighteenth century is also called the ’ Age of Reason ’ as the thinkers and writers of ...
This project argues that the eighteenth-century novel and the modern formation of adolescence develo...
Many of the objections to Samuel Richardson's Pamela: or Virtue Rewarded have come about because of ...
In the field of British literature, it is well established that during the eighteenth century the no...
This thesis examines the emergence of the woman as a main character and hero in a new genre of book,...
The 18'" century period is often considered as a period where women had to live ill men's world. The...
While marriage is often presented as a woman???s fate in the eighteenth-century novel, the\ud prolif...
Includes bibliographical references (p. ).In this study of five eighteenth-century British novels, I...
The article analyzes the use of epistolary form and the approach to the concept of virtue in Samuel ...
Pamela is the first epistolary novel by Samuel Richardson, a masterpiece of sentimentalist literatur...
Leduc Guyonne. Christine Roulston, Virtue, Gender, and the Authentic Self in Eighteenth-Century Fict...
This thesis explains the evolution of Samuel Richardson’s feminine ideal by examining his three nove...
This study examines concepts of morality and structures of domestic relationships in Samuel Richards...
This study provides a new account of the evolution of the eighteenth-century British novel by readin...
In his preface to Clarissa, Richardson warns parents against the "abuse of their natural authority" ...
ABSTRACT The eighteenth century is also called the ’ Age of Reason ’ as the thinkers and writers of ...
This project argues that the eighteenth-century novel and the modern formation of adolescence develo...
Many of the objections to Samuel Richardson's Pamela: or Virtue Rewarded have come about because of ...
In the field of British literature, it is well established that during the eighteenth century the no...
This thesis examines the emergence of the woman as a main character and hero in a new genre of book,...
The 18'" century period is often considered as a period where women had to live ill men's world. The...
While marriage is often presented as a woman???s fate in the eighteenth-century novel, the\ud prolif...
Includes bibliographical references (p. ).In this study of five eighteenth-century British novels, I...
The article analyzes the use of epistolary form and the approach to the concept of virtue in Samuel ...
Pamela is the first epistolary novel by Samuel Richardson, a masterpiece of sentimentalist literatur...
Leduc Guyonne. Christine Roulston, Virtue, Gender, and the Authentic Self in Eighteenth-Century Fict...
This thesis explains the evolution of Samuel Richardson’s feminine ideal by examining his three nove...
This study examines concepts of morality and structures of domestic relationships in Samuel Richards...
This study provides a new account of the evolution of the eighteenth-century British novel by readin...
In his preface to Clarissa, Richardson warns parents against the "abuse of their natural authority" ...