 |
 |
|
George Sanders and Kim Novak in The Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders |
| |
|
|
|
There are 7 critical essays on Moll Flanders.
Critical Essays on Moll Flanders

from source:

Critical Essay by Steven C. Michael
13,164 words, approx. 44 pages
 In the essay that follows, Michael examines the “apparent absence of a moral center” in Moll Flanders, and applies the work of several Postmodern theorists to demonstrate the ways in which Moll's language is a form of capital.
from source:

Critical Essay by Lois A. Chaber
10,600 words, approx. 35 pages
 In the following essay, Chaber explicates some of the Marxist and matriarchal themes of Defoe's novel.
from source:

Critical Essay by Michael F. Suarez
8,642 words, approx. 29 pages
 In the following essay, Suarez argues that Defoe stresses the insincerity of Moll's repentance with deliberate irony.
from source:

Critical Essay by Larry L. Langford
8,415 words, approx. 28 pages
 In the following essay, Langford discusses how the editor's preface to Moll Flanders should affect the reading of the novel.
from source:

Critical Essay by Ellen Pollak
8,156 words, approx. 27 pages
 In this essay, Pollak explores the role of incest in Moll's struggle for financial, linguistic, and sexual autonomy.
from source:

Critical Essay by Beth Swan
7,207 words, approx. 24 pages
 In the following essay, Swan places Moll's trial at Newgate into context as a didactic comment on legal reform, highlighting the role of “judicial discourse” in Moll's narrative.
from source:


 View More Articles on Moll Flanders
|
|


|
|  |
 |
|  |