The 18th century > The novel > The major novelists > Fielding
Henry Fielding turned to novel writing after a successful period as a dramatist, during which his most popular work had been in burlesque forms. Sir Robert Walpole's Licensing Act of 1737, introduced to restrict political satire on the stage, pushed Fielding to look to other genres. He also turned to journalism, of which he wrote a great deal, much of it political. His entry into prose fiction had something in common with the burlesque mode of much of his drama.
An Apology for the Life of Mrs. Shamela Andrews (1741), a travesty of Richardson's Pamela, transforms the latter's heroine into a predatory fortune hunter who cold-bloodedly lures her booby master into matrimony. Fielding continued his quarrel with Richardson in The History of the Adventures of Joseph Andrews (1742), which also uses Pamela as a starting point but which, developing a momentum of its own, soon outgrows any narrow parodic intent. His hostility to Richardson's sexual ethic notwithstanding, Fielding was happy to build, with a calm and smiling sophistication, on the growing respect for the novel to which his antagonist had so substantially contributed. In Joseph Andrews and The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling (1749), Fielding openly brought to bear upon his chosen form a battery of devices from more traditionally reputable modes (including epic poetry, painting, and the drama). This is accompanied by a flamboyant development of authorial presence. Fielding the narrator buttonholes the reader repeatedly, airs critical and ethical questions for the reader's delectation, and urbanely discusses the artifice upon which his fiction depends. In the deeply original Tom Jones especially, this assists in developing a distinctive atmosphere of self-confident magnanimity and candid optimism. His fiction, however, can also cope with a darker range of experience. The Life of Mr. Jonathan Wild the Great (1743), for instance, uses a mock-heroic idiom to explore a derisive parallel between the criminal underworld and England's political elite, and Amelia (1751) probes with sombre precision images of captivity and situations of taxing moral paradox.
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·Introduction
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·The Old English period
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·The early Middle English period
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·The later Middle English and early Renaissance periods
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·Later Middle English poetry
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·The revival of alliterative poetry
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·Courtly poetry
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·Chaucer and Gower
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·Poetry after Chaucer and Gower
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·Later Middle English prose
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·Middle English drama
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·The transition from medieval to Renaissance
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·The Renaissance period: 15501660
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·Literature and the age
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·Elizabethan poetry and prose
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·Elizabethan and early Stuart drama
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·Early Stuart poetry and prose
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·The Restoration
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·The 18th century
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·Publication of political literature
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·Journalism
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·Major political writers
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·The novel
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·The major novelists
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·Defoe
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·Richardson
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·Fielding
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·Smollett
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·Sterne
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·Other novelists
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·Poets and poetry after Pope
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·The Romantic period
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·The post-Romantic and Victorian eras
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·The 20th century
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·From 1900 to 1945
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·Literature after 1945
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·The 21st century
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·Additional Reading
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·General works
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·The Old English period
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·The Middle English period
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·The Renaissance period, 15501660
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·The Restoration and the 18th century
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·The Romantic period
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·The Post-Romantic and Victorian eras
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·The 20th century
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