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040 _btur
_erda
_aABU
041 0 _aeng
044 _cenk
050 0 0 _aPR 3454 .F54
_b.J67 1985
090 0 0 _aPR3454
100 1 _aFielding, Henry,
_d1707-1754.
_954771
245 1 _aJoseph Andrews/
_cHenry Fielding ; edited by R. F. Brissenden.
264 1 _aMiddlesex :
_bPenguin Books,
_c1985.
264 4 _cc1977
300 _a343 sayfa ;
_c19 cm.
336 _ametin
_btxt
_2rdacontent
337 _aaracısız
_bn
_2rdamedia
338 _acilt
_bnc
_2rdacarrier
490 0 _aPenguin Classics.
490 0 _aLiterature
505 _a“With zest, style and humour, Henry Fielding unfolds this curiously moral tale. With Shamela, published in 1741, Fielding set about exposing, by brilliant parody, the more vulnerable aspects of Samuel Richardson’s phenomenally successful Pamela. In the following year he offered, quite deliberately, his own alternative conception of the art and purpose of the novel: Joseph Andrews achieved an immediate popularity. The story of Joseph’s dogged determination, against all odds, to cling to his virtue is almost incidental in one of the richest, sanest, funniest and most attractive novels in the language. Drawn, as Fielding says, in imitation of Cervantes, its Don Quixote is the unforgettable Parson Adams - the unique embodiment of a vigorous, innocent and rational enjoyment of life and the first great comic character in English fiction.” -- Arka kapaktan
650 0 _aİngiliz edebiyatı
650 0 _aEnglish literature
650 0 _aİngiliz romanı
650 0 _aEnglish fiction
830 0 _aPenguin Classics.
_954778
830 0 _aLiterature
_954779
942 _2lcc
_cBK
999 _c26393
_d26393