
Henry Fielding and the narration of Providence : divine design and the incursions of evil
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"In Henry Fielding and the Narration of Providence, Richard A. Rosengarten analyzes the fate of the Augustinian tradition of the providential design of history in eighteenth-century England. At this time the retrospective form of literary narrative (also known as "the rise of the English novel") flourished, particularly in the novels of Henry Fielding.
Through his "historian" narrators, Fielding presents to the reader a sense of narrative ending that explores, with great power of poetic penetration, what claims humans can and cannot make, even retrospectively, for the realization of the divine design of the world. Fielding articulates what Richard Rosengarten terms a position of "principled diffidence" regarding the classic idea of providence: the doctrine is affirmed, but moves from its classic theological position in the earlier novels, located as the midpoint of the divine activity between creation and eschatology, to the point in Fielding's final novel, Amelia, where providence and eschatology are understood to be one and the same.
On this reading, Fielding's novels possess a previously unrecognized thematic unity, and Fielding's artistry defines a pivotal position in the history of providential narrative between Augustine's Confessions and William Faulkner's Absalom, Absalom!"--BOOK JACKET.
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