Abstract
This essay identifies Sarah Fielding as an early practitioner of a rhetoric that I call "sentimental irony." Reading her first novel in the context of the eighteenth-century value crisis postulated by the new economic criticism, I argue that Sarah Fielding uses sentimental irony to produce a melancholy interpretation of early modern social and cultural change. Ultimately, this essay endeavours to take a step to wards imagining what might be called "negative history," an anti-teleological mode of historiography that strives to tell the story of what did not happen. © ECF.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Kim, J. (2010, March). Mourning, melancholia, and modernity: Sentimental irony and downward mobility in David Simple. Eighteenth-Century Fiction. https://doi.org/10.3138/ecf.22.3.477
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.