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“Ye Gods Annihilate Both Space and Time” excerpt culture and the digital editing of eighteenth-century correspondence
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
-
Special Feature
- Adaptation and digitization in the long eighteenth century: sterneana and beyond 1
- Introduction to the Special Feature. Fitting things? adaptation, eighteenth-century afterlives, and digital cultures 3
- Linking Austen’s and Sterne’s Reception Journeys 23
- Laurence Sterne and Women’s Writing. Elizabeth Bonhôte, Jane Harvey, Jane Timbury, and Miss street 44
- “Ye Gods Annihilate Both Space and Time” excerpt culture and the digital editing of eighteenth-century correspondence 63
- Taking Tea with Joseph Addison: virginia woolf and the eighteenth century in Orlando (1928) 80
- “Gabriel Shandy Looks Me Deeply in the Eye” early Sterne adaptations and the formation of the novel in Hungarys 97
- Three Mid-Eighteenth- Century Mash-Ups: hybridity and conflicted discourse in Robert Paltock’s peter Wilkins and its early imitations 119
- A Distributional Analysis of the Language of Sensibility in the Sterne Corpus and ECCO 140
- “[It] Were Wisdome It Selfe, to Read All Authors, as Anonymo’s” anonymity, virtual communities, and sterneana 163
- Authorial Authority and the Mapping of An -Ana 181
-
Special Featur
- Irwin Primer and Bernard Mandeville 199
- Introduction to the Special Feature: Irwin Primer and Bernard Mandeville 201
- “What Strange Contradictions Man Is Made Of!” 215
- “Self Still Is at the Bottom” mandeville and french moralists 230
- The “System of Nature” and the French Reception of The Fable of the Bees in the Eighteenth Century 246
- Mandeville on Happiness, Self-Esteem, and Hypochondria 265
-
Book Reviews
- Cedric D. Reverand II, editor, Queen Anne and the Arts 287
- Kimiyo Ogawa and Mika Suzuki, editors, Johnson in Japan 292
- Kevin L. Cope, editor, Hemispheres and Stratospheres: The Idea and Experience of Distance in the International Enlightenment 296
- A. Joan Saab, Objects of Vision: Making Sense of What We See 300
- Eve Tavor Bannet and Roxann Wheeler, editors, Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture 303
- Margaret Schabas and Carl Wennerlind, A Philosopher’s Economist: Hume and the Rise of Capitalism 307
- Rory Muir, Gentlemen of Uncertain Fortune: How Younger Sons Made Their Way in Jane Austen’s England 310
- About the Contributors 313
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
-
Special Feature
- Adaptation and digitization in the long eighteenth century: sterneana and beyond 1
- Introduction to the Special Feature. Fitting things? adaptation, eighteenth-century afterlives, and digital cultures 3
- Linking Austen’s and Sterne’s Reception Journeys 23
- Laurence Sterne and Women’s Writing. Elizabeth Bonhôte, Jane Harvey, Jane Timbury, and Miss street 44
- “Ye Gods Annihilate Both Space and Time” excerpt culture and the digital editing of eighteenth-century correspondence 63
- Taking Tea with Joseph Addison: virginia woolf and the eighteenth century in Orlando (1928) 80
- “Gabriel Shandy Looks Me Deeply in the Eye” early Sterne adaptations and the formation of the novel in Hungarys 97
- Three Mid-Eighteenth- Century Mash-Ups: hybridity and conflicted discourse in Robert Paltock’s peter Wilkins and its early imitations 119
- A Distributional Analysis of the Language of Sensibility in the Sterne Corpus and ECCO 140
- “[It] Were Wisdome It Selfe, to Read All Authors, as Anonymo’s” anonymity, virtual communities, and sterneana 163
- Authorial Authority and the Mapping of An -Ana 181
-
Special Featur
- Irwin Primer and Bernard Mandeville 199
- Introduction to the Special Feature: Irwin Primer and Bernard Mandeville 201
- “What Strange Contradictions Man Is Made Of!” 215
- “Self Still Is at the Bottom” mandeville and french moralists 230
- The “System of Nature” and the French Reception of The Fable of the Bees in the Eighteenth Century 246
- Mandeville on Happiness, Self-Esteem, and Hypochondria 265
-
Book Reviews
- Cedric D. Reverand II, editor, Queen Anne and the Arts 287
- Kimiyo Ogawa and Mika Suzuki, editors, Johnson in Japan 292
- Kevin L. Cope, editor, Hemispheres and Stratospheres: The Idea and Experience of Distance in the International Enlightenment 296
- A. Joan Saab, Objects of Vision: Making Sense of What We See 300
- Eve Tavor Bannet and Roxann Wheeler, editors, Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture 303
- Margaret Schabas and Carl Wennerlind, A Philosopher’s Economist: Hume and the Rise of Capitalism 307
- Rory Muir, Gentlemen of Uncertain Fortune: How Younger Sons Made Their Way in Jane Austen’s England 310
- About the Contributors 313