Tom Jones (World's Classics)

Tom Jones (World's Classics)

by Henry Fielding (Author), John Bender (Editor), Simon Stern (Editor)

Synopsis

Fielding's comic work of 1749 was immediately attacked as "A motley history of bastardism, fornication, and adultery". Indeed, his populous novel overflows with a marvellous assortment of prudes, whores, libertines, bumpkins, misanthropes, hypocrites, scoundrels, virgins, and all too fallible humanitarians. At the centre of one of the most ingenious plots in English fiction stands a hero whose actions were, in 1749, as shocking as they are funny today. Expelled from Mr Allworthy's country estate for his wild temper and sexual conquests, the good-hearted foundling Tom Jones loses his money, joins the army, and pursues his beloved across Britain to London, where he becomes a kept lover and confronts the possibility of incest. "Tom Jones" is rightly regarded as Fielding's greatest work, and one of the first and most influential of English novels. This modernized edition is based on Fielding's emended fourth edition text and offers thorough notes, maps, and a bibliography. The introduction examines how "Tom Jones" exemplifies the role of the novel in the emerging eighteenth-century public sphere.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 959
Edition: New
Publisher: Oxford Paperbacks
Published: Sep 1996

ISBN 10: 0192831100
ISBN 13: 9780192831101

Author Bio

John Bender is Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Stanford University. He is author of Spenser and Literary Pictorialism and Imagining the Penitentiary: Fiction and Architecture of Mind in Eighteenth-Century England, co-editor of The Ends of Rhetoric and Chronotypes: The Construction of Time, and associate editor of The Columbia History of the British Novel. Simon Stern is completing a study of literary property and professional authorship in eighteenth- century England, focusing on Henry and Sarah Fielding.