Göttlicher Plot in menschlicher Story? Die Zufallsproblematik im Romanwerk Henry Fieldings

Verfasser / Beitragende:
[Klaus Stierstorfer]
Ort, Verlag, Jahr:
2003
Enthalten in:
Anglia - Zeitschrift für englische Philologie, 121/1(2003-10-23), 4-31
Format:
Artikel (online)
ID: 378858777
LEADER caa a22 4500
001 378858777
003 CHVBK
005 20180305123341.0
007 cr unu---uuuuu
008 161128e20031023xx s 000 0 eng
024 7 0 |a 10.1515/ANGL.2003.4  |2 doi 
035 |a (NATIONALLICENCE)gruyter-10.1515/ANGL.2003.4 
100 1 |a Stierstorfer  |D Klaus  |u Düsseldorf 
245 1 0 |a Göttlicher Plot in menschlicher Story? Die Zufallsproblematik im Romanwerk Henry Fieldings  |h [Elektronische Daten]  |c [Klaus Stierstorfer] 
520 3 |a Fielding's novels have repeatedly been read as narrative representations of a moral, divinely ordained order. More particularly, Fielding's treatment of chance, a hotly contested field in eighteenth-century British culture, has lent itself to interpretations built on such premises. To critics like George Sherbourne or Martin Battestin, the instances of chance in Fielding's work have appeared as the novelist's application, to essentially didactic ends, of the doctrines on providence, fate and fortune propounded by the leading Anglican preachers of that time. These views on Fielding's art show themselves well-suited to some of his non-fictional writings as well as for his last and least successful novel, Amelia. A close analysis of the instances where chance and cognate concepts occur in his first three novels, however, proves these to be such heterogeneous, contradictory and indeed playful variations on this theme that it is impossible to subsume them under any underlying concepts of order or moralizing dogma. By implication, this evidence of unredeemable heterogeneity also undercuts more recent, sophisticated work on Fielding wherever the argument hinges on a systematic reading of chance in his first three novels. While structural and formal aspects typical of prevalent Anglican views on chance of the period are clearly discernible, their rhetorical application in Fielding's first three novels is eventually geared to different objectives. The most important of these are identified as comic effect in the sense of Hutcheson's theory of laughter and as the didactic experience of rhetorical instrumentalization of chance by persons of all persuasions and ideological backgrounds. 
540 |a © Max Niemeyer Verlag GmbH, Tübingen 2003 
773 0 |t Anglia - Zeitschrift für englische Philologie  |d Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG  |g 121/1(2003-10-23), 4-31  |x 0340-5222  |q 121:1<4  |1 2003  |2 121  |o ANGL 
856 4 0 |u https://doi.org/10.1515/ANGL.2003.4  |q text/html  |z Onlinezugriff via DOI 
908 |D 1  |a research article  |2 jats 
950 |B NATIONALLICENCE  |P 856  |E 40  |u https://doi.org/10.1515/ANGL.2003.4  |q text/html  |z Onlinezugriff via DOI 
950 |B NATIONALLICENCE  |P 100  |E 1-  |a Stierstorfer  |D Klaus  |u Düsseldorf 
950 |B NATIONALLICENCE  |P 773  |E 0-  |t Anglia - Zeitschrift für englische Philologie  |d Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG  |g 121/1(2003-10-23), 4-31  |x 0340-5222  |q 121:1<4  |1 2003  |2 121  |o ANGL 
900 7 |b CC0  |u http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0  |2 nationallicence 
898 |a BK010053  |b XK010053  |c XK010000 
949 |B NATIONALLICENCE  |F NATIONALLICENCE  |b NL-gruyter