Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- Introduction: A Genealogy of Suicide
- 1 Suicide and Spectrality in Eliza Haywood's Amatory Fiction
- 2 Mors Voluntaria: Clarissa and the Agency of Martyrdom
- 3 English Maladies and Material Culture at Mid-Century
- 4 The Pathology of Sentiment: Politics, Sacrifice and Wertherism in the English Novel of Sensibility
- 5 ‘The Death of Reason’: Vitalism, Transnational Identity and Frances Burney
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
2 - Mors Voluntaria: Clarissa and the Agency of Martyrdom
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- Introduction: A Genealogy of Suicide
- 1 Suicide and Spectrality in Eliza Haywood's Amatory Fiction
- 2 Mors Voluntaria: Clarissa and the Agency of Martyrdom
- 3 English Maladies and Material Culture at Mid-Century
- 4 The Pathology of Sentiment: Politics, Sacrifice and Wertherism in the English Novel of Sensibility
- 5 ‘The Death of Reason’: Vitalism, Transnational Identity and Frances Burney
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In her remarks on Samuel Richardson's celebrated second novel, Clarissa (1748), the novelist Sarah Fielding finds that ‘the gentle Clarissa's death is the natural consequence of her innocent life; her calm and prepared spirit, like a soft smooth stream, flows gently on, till it slides from her misfortunes, and she leaves the world free from fear, and animated only by a lively hope’. Although this panegyric typifies the immediate critical reception of Richardson's massive, seven-volume work, by the last decade of the eighteenth century the cult status of Richardson's second novel had diminished just enough to expose its protagonist to the censure of critics. Thus, in her Letters on Education (1789), Catherine Macaulay summarily jettisons Clarissa from her canon of acceptable young adult reading material on the grounds that its heroine, ‘though represented as a paragon of piety and moral excellence, is positive and conceited; and all her distresses are brought upon her by the adhering to some very whimsical notions which she has entertained of duty and propriety of conduct’. In addition to this already scathing criticism, Macaulay identifies as Clarissa Harlowe's chief offense ‘her rigid adherence to the discipline of fasting, whilst under the alarming symptoms of a deep decline’. Needless to say, Macaulay's intimation that Clarissa stages a voluntary death marks an extreme departure from the reception that Richardson's most celebrated novel received at its mid-century publication.
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- Information
- Dying to be EnglishSuicide Narratives and National Identity, 1721–1814, pp. 53 - 88Publisher: Pickering & ChattoFirst published in: 2014