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Kimiyo Ogawa and Mika Suzuki, editors, Johnson in Japan

© 2023 Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick

© 2023 Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Special Feature
  4. Adaptation and digitization in the long eighteenth century: sterneana and beyond 1
  5. Introduction to the Special Feature. Fitting things? adaptation, eighteenth-century afterlives, and digital cultures 3
  6. Linking Austen’s and Sterne’s Reception Journeys 23
  7. Laurence Sterne and Women’s Writing. Elizabeth Bonhôte, Jane Harvey, Jane Timbury, and Miss street 44
  8. “Ye Gods Annihilate Both Space and Time” excerpt culture and the digital editing of eighteenth-century correspondence 63
  9. Taking Tea with Joseph Addison: virginia woolf and the eighteenth century in Orlando (1928) 80
  10. “Gabriel Shandy Looks Me Deeply in the Eye” early Sterne adaptations and the formation of the novel in Hungarys 97
  11. Three Mid-Eighteenth- Century Mash-Ups: hybridity and conflicted discourse in Robert Paltock’s peter Wilkins and its early imitations 119
  12. A Distributional Analysis of the Language of Sensibility in the Sterne Corpus and ECCO 140
  13. “[It] Were Wisdome It Selfe, to Read All Authors, as Anonymo’s” anonymity, virtual communities, and sterneana 163
  14. Authorial Authority and the Mapping of An -Ana 181
  15. Special Featur
  16. Irwin Primer and Bernard Mandeville 199
  17. Introduction to the Special Feature: Irwin Primer and Bernard Mandeville 201
  18. “What Strange Contradictions Man Is Made Of!” 215
  19. “Self Still Is at the Bottom” mandeville and french moralists 230
  20. The “System of Nature” and the French Reception of The Fable of the Bees in the Eighteenth Century 246
  21. Mandeville on Happiness, Self-Esteem, and Hypochondria 265
  22. Book Reviews
  23. Cedric D. Reverand II, editor, Queen Anne and the Arts 287
  24. Kimiyo Ogawa and Mika Suzuki, editors, Johnson in Japan 292
  25. Kevin L. Cope, editor, Hemispheres and Stratospheres: The Idea and Experience of Distance in the International Enlightenment 296
  26. A. Joan Saab, Objects of Vision: Making Sense of What We See 300
  27. Eve Tavor Bannet and Roxann Wheeler, editors, Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture 303
  28. Margaret Schabas and Carl Wennerlind, A Philosopher’s Economist: Hume and the Rise of Capitalism 307
  29. Rory Muir, Gentlemen of Uncertain Fortune: How Younger Sons Made Their Way in Jane Austen’s England 310
  30. About the Contributors 313
1650-1850
This chapter is in the book 1650-1850
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