Volume 13, No. 1, October 2000

ARTICLES

The Relicks of Learning: Sterne among the Renaissance Encyclopedists
Jack Lynch

De la traduction au pastiche: l'Histoire du chevalier Grandisson
Shelly Charles

The Wandering Minstrel: An Eighteenth-Century Fiction?
Patricia Howard

Jane Austen and George Stubbs: Two Speculations
Alistair M. Duckworth

REVIEW ESSAY

Martin C. Battestin, "Fielding and the Deists"

REVIEWS

Jerry Beasley on John Richetti, The English Novel in History, 1700-1800

P.N. Furbank on Jay Caplan, In the King's Wake: Post-Absolutist Culture in France

David Richter on James Cruise, Governing Consumption: Needs and Wants, Suspended Characters, and the "Origins" of Eighteenth-Century Novels

Richard Morton on Frank Felsenstein, ed., English Trader, Indian Maid: Representing Gender, Race, and Slavery in the New World. And Inkle and Yarico Reader

Victor Kocay on Françoise Tilkin, éd., Le Lire et le délire

Philip Knee, on L'Équipe Rousseau, dirigé par Tanguy l'Aminot, Jean-Jacques Rousseau et la lecture

Lawrence Kerslake on Jean Terrasse, Le Temps et l'espace dans les romans de Diderot

Jay Caplan on Marie-Hélène Chabut, Denis Diderot: Extravagance et génialité

Marc André Bernier on Robert Challe, Difficultés sur la religion proposées au père Malebranche, éd. Frédéric Deloffre et François Moureau

April London on Charlotte Smith, The Young Philosopher, ed. Elizabeth Kraft; and Elizabeth Hamilton, Translations of the Letters of a Hindoo Rajah, ed. Pamela Perkins and Shannon Russell

David C. Hensley on Allen Michie, Richardson and Fielding: The Dynamics of a Critical Rivalry

George Justice on Gordon D. Fulton, Styles of Meaning and Meanings of Style in Richardson's "Clarissa"; and Victor J. Lams, Anger, Guilt, and the Psychology of Self in "Clarissa"

Robert D. Hume on Tiffany Potter, Honest Sins: Georgian Libertinism and the Plays and Novels of Henry Fielding

Susan Staves on Brian McCrea, Impotent Fathers: Patriarchy and Demographic Crisis in the Eighteenth-Century NovelCatherine Craft-Fairchild on Delarivier Manley, The Adventures of Rivella, ed. Katherine Zelinsky; Eliza Haywood, The Adventures of Eovaai: Princess of Ijaveo, ed. Earla Wilputte; and Eliza Haywood, The Injured Husband and Lasselia, ed. Jerry C. Beasley

Frédéric Charbonneau on Jean Dagen, éd., Entre Épicure et Vauvenargues: principes et formes de la pensée morale; and Jean Dagen, éd., La Morale des moralistes

Marie-France Silver on Catherine Cusset, No Tomorrow: The Ethics of Pleasure in the French Enlightenment; and Catherine Cusset, ed., Libertinage and Modernity. Yale French Studies 94

Barbara K. Seeber on Edward Neill, The Politics of Jane Austen

Aileen Douglas on April London, Women and Property in the Eighteenth-Century English Novel

Alistair M. Duckworth on Linda Troost and Sayre Greenfield, eds., Jane Austen in Hollywood

Shinobu Minma on Mary Waldron, Jane Austen and the Fiction of Her Time

Madelyn Gutwirth on Lori Jo Marso, (Un)Manly Citizens: Jean-Jacques Rousseau's and Germaine de Staël's Subversive Women

Michael J. Call on Jenny Mander, Circles of Learning: Narratology and the Eighteenth-Century French Novel

Anne K. Mellor on Jacqueline Pearson, Women's Reading in Britain 1750-1835: A Dangerous Recreation

Stephen Ahern on Andrew Varney, Eighteenth-Century Writers in Their World: A Mighty Maze

Elizabeth Heckendorn Cook on Thomas O. Beebee, Epistolary Fiction in Europe 1500-1850

 


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