Hurry - Only 2 left in stock!
|
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Samuel Richardson: A Brief Chronology
A Note on the Text
Clarissa
Appendix A: Prefatory Material for the Second Edition, 1749
Appendix B: Richardson’s Correspondence
Appendix C: Eighteenth-Century Responses to Clarissa
Select Bibliography
Toni Bowers is Professor of English at the University of Pennsylvania.
John Richetti is A.M. Rosenthal Professor (Emeritus) of English at the University of Pennsylvania. Both have published widely on eighteenth-century fiction.
“Clarissa is one of the towering masterpieces of the eighteenth century, and it is impossible to understand the literature of the period and the rise of the novel without it. This new edition provides a rigorously conceived, expertly executed solution to the problem of abridgment, and restores to the undergraduate classroom a work previously excluded by sheer length.” — Thomas Keymer, University of Toronto “Arguably the best novel published in Great Britain in the eighteenth century and an undisputed landmark of European literature, Clarissa, at over a million words, is too long for the undergraduate classroom. Here, finally, is an abridgment that, while reducing its length, remains faithful to the spirit of the original. Based on the text of the third edition and judiciously edited by Toni Bowers and John Richetti, the Broadview Clarissa superbly fills a long-standing pedagogical need. With its excellent introduction, detailed notes, and generous background and contextual materials, this edition makes Richardson’s masterpiece accessible to twenty-first century students.” — Albert J. Rivero, Marquette University “Eager to introduce rather than replace a masterpiece, Richetti and Bowers offer a practical classroom compromise to the familiar problem of Richardson’s prolixity. Surely an abridgment of this magnitude—with its smart choice of the 1751 third edition as copy text, its accessible introduction and notes, and an appendix that resurrects important historical contexts—will tempt new generations of readers to consider, eventually, all of Clarissa.” — Janine Barchas, University of Texas at Austin
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |