This Norton Critical Edition reprints the authoritative Wesleyan text of Joseph Andrews, edited by Martin Battestin. An accurate text of Shamela (Fielding’s satire of Samuel Richardson’s Pamela, the most popular epistolary novel of the time), An Essay on the Knowledge of the Characters of Men, selections from The Champion, and the Preface to The Adventures of David Simple are also included. All of the texts are fully annotated...
This Norton Critical Edition reprints the authoritative Wesleyan text of Joseph Andrews, edited by Martin Battestin. An accurate text of Shamela (Fielding’s satire of Samuel Richardson’s Pamela, the most popular epistolary novel of the time), An Essay on the Knowledge of the Characters of Men, selections from The Champion, and the Preface to The Adventures of David Simple are also included. All of the texts are fully annotated.
The "Backgrounds" section contains generous excerpts from works Fielding had in mind as he wrote Joseph Andrews. Included are texts that Fielding satirized--Pamela and Conyer Middleton’s Dedication to the Life of Cicero--and emulated-- Gil Blas and selections from Don Quixote, the Roman Comique, and Le Paysan Parvenu. The section concludes with a general explanation of the political and religious contexts in which Joseph Andrews was written.
"Criticism" offers a broad range of responses to the novel. Contemporary assessments include selected letters (of Thomas Gray, William Shenstone, Samuel Richardson, and others) as well as commentary from The Student, or Oxford and Cambridge Monthly Miscellany, by William Hazlitt, James Beattie, and Sarah Fielding and Jane Collier. Modern assessments are contributed by Mark Spilka, Dick Taylor, Jr., Martin Battestin, Sheldon Sacks, Morris Golden, Brian McCrea, and Homer Goldberg.
Editor’s Preface
The Text of Joseph Andrews
The Text of Shamela
Related Writings
From The Champion
[Essay on Reputation]
[Essay on Good Nature]
[The Apology for the Clergy]
An Essay on the Knowledge of the Characters of Men
Preface to The Adventures of David Simple
Backgrounds and Sources
Samuel Richardson · From Pamela, or Virtue
Rewarded
Conyers Middleton · From the Dedication to The
History of the Life of Marcus Tullius Cicero
Migue] de Cervantes Saavedra · From The Life
and Atchievements of the Renown’d Don Quixote
Paul Scarron · From Le Roman comique
Alain-Ren· Lesage · From Histoire de Gil Blas de
Santillane
Pierre Carlet de Chamblain de Marivaux · From
Le Paysan parvenu, ou les Memoirs de M * * *
Political and Religious Background
Criticism
CONTEMPORARY RESPONSES AND EARLY CRITICISM
Letters
George Cheyne to Samuel Richardson,
March 9, 1742
Thomas Gray to Richard West, April 1742
William Shcnstone to Richard Graves, 1742
William Shenstonc to Lady Henrietta Luxborough,
March 22, 1749
Elizabeth Carter to Catherine Talbot,
January 1, 1743
Samucl Richardson to Lady Dorothy Bradshaigh,
1749
Pierre Franqois Guyot Desfontaines · From
Observations sur les eerits modernes
From The Student, or, The Oxford and Cambridge
Monthly Miscellany, January 20, 1750
Sarah Fielding [and Jane Collier?] · [Parson Adams
Not an Object of Ridicule]
James Beattie · [The New Comic Romance]
William Hazlitt · [A Perfect Piece of Statistics
in Its Kind]
MODERN CRITICISM
Mark Spilka · Comic Resolution in Fielding’s
Joseph Andrews
Dick Taylor, Jr. · Joseph as Hero in Joseph Andrews
Martin C. Battestin · [Thematic Meaning and
Structure]
Sheldon Sacks · [Fielding’s Guidance of the Reader’s
Attitudes in Book 1, Chapters 1-11]
[Wilson’s Tale]
Morris Golden · [Fielding’s Psychology and Its
Relation to Morality]
Homer Goldberg · The Reasoning Behind the Form
of Joseph Andrews
Brian McCrea · Rewriting Pamela: Social Change and
Rcligious Faith in Joseph Andrews
Selected Bibliography