'Eighteenth century literature is united in its common concern with the meaning of virtue in a changing world.' Statements relevance to Pope's 'The Rape of the Lock' and Richardson's 'Pamela'
Title: 'Eighteenth century literature is united in its common concern with the meaning of virtue in a changing world.' Statements relevance to Pope's 'The Rape of the Lock' and Richardson's 'Pamela'
Category: /Science & Technology
Details: Words: 2496 | Pages: 9 (approximately 235 words/page)
'Eighteenth century literature is united in its common concern with the meaning of virtue in a changing world.' Statements relevance to Pope's 'The Rape of the Lock' and Richardson's 'Pamela'
Category: /Science & Technology
Details: Words: 2496 | Pages: 9 (approximately 235 words/page)
Pope's The Rape of the Lock and Richardson's Pamela are apt for comparison in that they both deal with exposing the upper class for having a lack of virtue. Pope's parody is to show up his social peers by bringing to light their vanity and lack of concern for morals. Pamela, on the other hand was originally written to educate the lower classes, which obviously impacts on its handling of virtue.
On a more subtle
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BOOKS
Demaria, Robert (ed.), 2005, British Literature 1640-1789 An Anthology, Second Edition, Oxford: Blackwell Publishing
Richardson, Samuel, Intro. By Weekes Kinkead, Pamela In Two Volumes, Volume Two, 1966, Everyman's Library, London: Dent Dutton
Richardson, Samuel, Sabor, Peter (ed.), 1980, Pamela; Or Virtue Rewarded, St. Ives: Penguin
Skinner, John, 2001, An Introduction to Eighteenth Century Fiction, Raising the Novel,
Hampshire: Palgrave
OTHER
Lecture and seminar slides\notes.