Shamela

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b Hawley, Judith (1999), "Note on the text", Joseph Andrews and Shamela, London: Penguin Books.
  2. ^ a b login.prxy4.ursus.maine.edu https://login.prxy4.ursus.maine.edu/login?qurl=https://go.gale.com%2fps%2fi.do%3fp%3dLitRC%26u%3dmaine_orono%26id%3dGALE%257CH1410000854%26v%3d2.1%26it%3dr%26sid%3dsummon. Retrieved 12 December 2019. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  3. ^ Vasarri (2006) p.7 quotation:

    Un esempio canonico: quando Fielding trasforma la virtuosa servetta di Richardson prima in una spudorata arrampicatrice, poi in un irreprensibile garzone concupito dalla padrona, fa una parodia. Leggere Shamela e Joseph Andrews equivale pressapoco a rileggere Pamela attraverso una lente deformante. Un dato testo è sovvertito, dissacrato, ma anche riscritto in una forma suscettibile di rivelarne, oltre agli aspetti risibili, le implicazioni nascoste, gettendo magari le basi di uno sviluppo futuro.

  4. ^ Davidson (2004) p.134

    Fielding's parody revises the conversational exchanges between Pamela and B. into a condensed, degraded pastiche that exposes the truly sordid nature of Richardson's dialogue. ... readers of Shamela who return to Pamela often feel themselves to be reading a different – and a far less innocent – novel.

  5. ^ Fielding, Henry (12 July 2008), Keymer, Thomas (ed.), Joseph Andrews and Shamela (paperback) (New ed.), Oxford, ISBN 978-0-19-953698-6
  6. ^ Rothstein, Eric (September 1968). "The Framework of Shamela". ELH. 35 (3): 381–402. doi:10.2307/2872283. JSTOR 2872283.
  7. ^ Castro-Santana, Anaclara. Errors and Reconciliations: Marriage in the Plays and Novels of Henry Fielding (NY: Routledge, 2018), chapter 3, pp. 107-27

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