

#7109
Mentioned in 7 episodes
Pamela
Book • 1741
Samuel Richardson's "Pamela" is considered one of the earliest and most influential examples of the epistolary novel.
Written in the form of letters, the novel tells the story of a young servant girl who resists the advances of her master.
The novel's focus on Pamela's inner thoughts and feelings, conveyed through her letters, was groundbreaking for its time.
"Pamela" explores themes of virtue, morality, and social class, and its innovative structure helped shape the development of the novel as a literary form.
Its success led to a sequel, "Clarissa", and significantly influenced later novelists.
Written in the form of letters, the novel tells the story of a young servant girl who resists the advances of her master.
The novel's focus on Pamela's inner thoughts and feelings, conveyed through her letters, was groundbreaking for its time.
"Pamela" explores themes of virtue, morality, and social class, and its innovative structure helped shape the development of the novel as a literary form.
Its success led to a sequel, "Clarissa", and significantly influenced later novelists.
Mentioned by











Mentioned in 7 episodes
Mentioned by ![undefined]()

when discussing the rise of the novel and its connection to letter writing.

Paul Lay

68 snips
The dawn of the post-literate society
Mentioned by 

when referring to a joke by Tom McCaffrey.


Sam Morril

25 snips
Ep 233: Eric Andre
Mentioned by 

as the basis for his novel Justine, which parodies Richardson's themes of virtue.


Tom Holland

25 snips
365. Le Marquis de Sade: Sex and Violence
Mentioned when discussing the voyeuristic fetishization of people’s private feelings.

13 snips
The Demise of Private Life
Mentioned by 

as an early novel often called the first modern English novel about a protracted courtship.


Zachary Crockett

13 snips
27. Romance Novels
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as the bestselling epistolary novel exemplifying the letter's literary power and social leveling.

Kevin Pasch

The Origins of the Modern Public Part Eleven
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as an early domestic novel exemplifying private life as literary focus.

Michael McKeon

The Origins of the Modern Public Part Nine
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as an example of a novel written by Samuel Richardson that isn't read so much these days.

Sonja Zarnicki

S2 E6 Is Mrs. Bennet a Bad Mom? Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice
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as a book about a maid servant who refuses her master's sexual advances.

Shannon Chamberlain

Shanon Chamberlain: what is a novel?
Mentioned as a successful imitation of Bunyan's writing style in Pilgrim's Progress.

Benjamin Franklin Autobiography



