Many innovations in Samuel Richardson's final novel, Sir Charles Grandison, set it apart. I argue that the ways in which Richardson innovated in the final volume in particular altered his attitude toward closure. Richardson carried this modified way of thinking into the work of his late life, as self-editor and anthologizer. Grandison is a vital key to understanding his didactic project as a whole—and is, in many ways, the conclusion of that project. Moreover, Richardson's moves are far from unique, and examining the form of Richardson's ending begins to show us a more comprehensive understanding of the history of the novel
Samuel Richardson, the founder of the modern English novel, gave shape to a previously unformed lite...
This dissertation examines the problem of narrative closure in Hawthorne's major romances in the lig...
Sarah Fielding promoted rational reading practices through techniques that often differed from those...
This thesis is a broadly chronological study of Samuel Richardson’s correspondence, from his early c...
In the mid-eighteenth century, women writers participated in dynamic and innovative criticism about ...
MPhilMuch has been written about the life and long works of the eighteenth century epistolary noveli...
This dissertation explores the development of prose fiction continuations from Sir Philip Sidney’s ...
The name of Henry Handel Richardson is to most critics in England today a vestigial whisper, a eupho...
When Richardson described Clarissa as a ‘Dramatic Narrative’, he established one of the central crit...
Through an analysis of the reception of Charles Dickens’ unfinished The Mystery of Edwin Drood this...
This author details Richardson’s revision process as he edits his first novel Pamela as the last thi...
Between 1740 and 1754 Samuel Richardson, a busy and successful printer in London, wrote three novels...
Perhaps more so than any other writer of his era, Charles Dickens knew how to tell a story that woul...
This thesis explains the evolution of Samuel Richardson’s feminine ideal by examining his three nove...
This essay is part of a larger project that investigates the ways in which Burney's endings (in her ...
Samuel Richardson, the founder of the modern English novel, gave shape to a previously unformed lite...
This dissertation examines the problem of narrative closure in Hawthorne's major romances in the lig...
Sarah Fielding promoted rational reading practices through techniques that often differed from those...
This thesis is a broadly chronological study of Samuel Richardson’s correspondence, from his early c...
In the mid-eighteenth century, women writers participated in dynamic and innovative criticism about ...
MPhilMuch has been written about the life and long works of the eighteenth century epistolary noveli...
This dissertation explores the development of prose fiction continuations from Sir Philip Sidney’s ...
The name of Henry Handel Richardson is to most critics in England today a vestigial whisper, a eupho...
When Richardson described Clarissa as a ‘Dramatic Narrative’, he established one of the central crit...
Through an analysis of the reception of Charles Dickens’ unfinished The Mystery of Edwin Drood this...
This author details Richardson’s revision process as he edits his first novel Pamela as the last thi...
Between 1740 and 1754 Samuel Richardson, a busy and successful printer in London, wrote three novels...
Perhaps more so than any other writer of his era, Charles Dickens knew how to tell a story that woul...
This thesis explains the evolution of Samuel Richardson’s feminine ideal by examining his three nove...
This essay is part of a larger project that investigates the ways in which Burney's endings (in her ...
Samuel Richardson, the founder of the modern English novel, gave shape to a previously unformed lite...
This dissertation examines the problem of narrative closure in Hawthorne's major romances in the lig...
Sarah Fielding promoted rational reading practices through techniques that often differed from those...