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Turning
the Hearts of Our Enemies
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The Game-Theoretical Design
of Henry Fielding's Joseph
Andrews
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Overheads for a lecture
in Elizabeth Heckendorn Cook's English 30, W97
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Francis Steen
Department of English, UCSB
Monday, March 3, 1997
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Themes
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Game-theoretical model: how to achieve cooperation
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Cheater detection: how to tell the truth behind appearances
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Commercial society versus the traditional agrarian society:
resolving the conflict in a creative conceptual blend
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The destabilization and reaffirmation of gender codes
Events in Book I
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Joseph is dismissed for refusing Lady Booby's advances
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Robbed on the way home, he is left for dead in a ditch
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A lawyer in a coach saves him to prevent a lawsuit
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Betty the chambermaid gives him a bed at the Tow-wouse's
inn
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The surgeon and parson Barnabas pronounce him dying
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Parson Adams arrives and makes sure he recovers
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Betty tries to seduce Joseph and ends up with Mr. Tow-wouse
A. Cooperation
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Joseph doesn't want to give in to Lady Booby
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The thief takes his money for nothing and beats him up too
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The people in the coach at first see no reason to help him
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Mrs. Tow-wouse thinks he's not worth taking care of
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Joseph's failure to enlist people's cooperation almost kills
him
The Problem of Cooperation in Game Theory
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Joseph (player B)
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Cooperate
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Defect
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Cooperate
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A provides service and gets
benefit (R)
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A provides service but gets no benefit (S)
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A
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B accepts service and pays
cost (R)
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B accepts service but pays no cost (T)
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Defect
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A provides no service but gets
benefit (T)
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A provides no service and gets no benefit (Z)
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B gets no service but pays
cost (S)
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B gets no service and pays no cost (Z)
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T = Temptation
R = Reward for cooperating
Z = Zero outcome; no cooperation
S = Sucker's payoff
T > R > Z > S
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The thief falls for Temptation and leaves Joseph with a Sucker's
payoff
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The people in the coach worry about Sucker's payoff and prefer
no cooperation (Z)
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Mrs. Tow-wouse worries about Sucker's payoff and prefers
no cooperation
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Parson Trulliber worries about Sucker's payoff and prefers
no cooperation
Logic keeps pushing people towards Z/Z: no trust, no cooperation.
In this way, people avoid the worst outcome (S)--but fail to realize what
would be better for all (R/R). Scoundrels keep trying for T, the best of
all outcomes.
The problem of any community: how to realize the benefits
of cooperation, or move from Z to R.
What makes it even more difficult is what is known
as Banker's Paradox: the bank will lend you money only if you can prove
you don't need it.
Joseph becomes victim to the Banker's Paradox: he's
really in trouble and needs help badly--and this is precisely when people
are the most reluctant to help him, because they're worried they'll be
stuck with a Sucker's payoff
Parson Adams' Solution to the Cooperation Problem
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In Richardson's Pamela, the actions of the heroine
could be interpreted to be basically selfish--as Fielding's parody Shamela
shows
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This morality doesn't overcome the Banker's Paradox, since
you would only help people who can provide you with significant advantages
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In Joseph Andrews, Fielding wanted to propose a more
radical morality: always cooperate, on the basis of
Empathy
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Empathy means to be open to experiencing another's distress,
which will lead you to cooperate even if the favor cannot be instantly
(or ever) reciprocated, at least not personally
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Parson Adams showed "a great deal of emotion at the distress
of this poor creature" (50), before he knows it is Joseph
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He holds "it was the duty of men of all professions to apply
their skill gratis for the relief of the poor and necessitous" (51)
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He says of the second inn-keeper, who shows no compassion
for Joseph's bruised leg, "he believed the devil had more humanity" (99)
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He asks Trulliber to lend him money "which, peradventure,
I shall return to you" (140)
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He argues we should "forgive others their debts" (184)
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He is "the good parson, whose heart was naturally disposed
to love and affection" (145)
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He "always sympathized with his friends on [sad] occasions"
(189)
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In contrast, Mrs. Tow-wouse shows "an insensibility to human
misery" (160)
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If most people are empathic and compassionate, this works
as insurance: the risk is spread out, and on average everyone is much better
off
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As Adams puts it at the end of the book, the aim is "not
only to defeat the designs of our enemies, but even to turn their hearts"
(265)
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That is, to move not from Sucker's payoff to Zero (which
is the main concern of the unvirtuous characters), but to a stable
cooperation.
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The empathic strategy, however, is vulnerable to cheaters,
who consistently fall for Temptation and leave you with a Sucker's payoff
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Since nobody has infinite resources, nobody can survive a
long string of Sucker's payoffs--Joseph is cutting it very close
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Parson Adams doesn't deal with cheaters very well--he is
too gullible
B. Seeing through appearances, cheater detection
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The second book is a string of people who are not what they
seem
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Parson Adams is not very good at seeing though people
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He sees no further into people than they desire him to
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This makes him extra vulnerable to the Sucker's payoff
Events in Book II
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Adams walks off and Joseph is stuck with the bill for the
horse
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Adams hears the two lawyers blame and praise a justice (the
pretend virtue of truthfulness)
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Slipslop rescues Joseph; in the coach they hear the story
of Leonora
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Adams encounters the self-proclaimed patriot (the pretended
virtue of courage)
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He rescues Fanny from rape before he knows it's her--but
almost gets killed
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The assailant manages to stick the blame on them (the pretended
virtue of the innocent victim)
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They are recognized at the justice's and released, and walk
to the next inn
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Fanny faints when she hears Joseph, and Adams throws his
Aeschylus on the fire
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Joseph and Fanny meet, and Adams dances for joy
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Adams visits Trulliber, the avaricious parson who pretends
to be a man of charity (the pretended virtue of charity)
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They encounter the man of false promises (the pretended virtue
of magnanimity or generosity)
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Adams and the alehouse keeper discuss book learning and life
experience
At this point, Joseph begins to assert himself:
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Adams' gullibility has got them into trouble again--they're
stuck with the bill
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Joseph knows Adams is wrong to believe that "knowledge of
men is only to be learnt from books" (150)
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Nor do we have much reason to rely on his conviction that
"a skilful physiognomist will rarely be deceived" (155)
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In the next book, the whole sequence with the Roasting Squire
demonstrates that Adams lacks the ability to detect deception
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The doctor, for instance, "could laugh inwardly without betraying
the least symptoms in his countenance" (211), tricking Adams into a tub
of water
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The moral of this is that Joseph cannot rely on Adams alone:
society is not what Adams thinks it is, and poses a set of problems that
are not all solved in old books
C. Literature as a Social Reference Library
Developmental psychology
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Humans tend to look to others--elders and peers--for guidance
for how to behave
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A six month old infant crawling on a glass floor with a 'visual
cliff' will pause and look to the mother
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If the mother shows anxiety, the infant will retreat and
maybe start crying
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If the mother smiles and nods, the infant will crawl onto
the glass--in spite of its fear of heights
Evolutionary psychology
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For much longer than recorded history, human beings have
lived in tribes of around a hundred people
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A vital aid for survival has consistently been the knowledge
obtained from others in the group--typically elder teaching
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Humans are biologically disposed to acquire culture--to look
to others, rather than continually reinventing the wheel
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Empathy is the cognitive adaptation for solving the cooperation
problem--but culture, or elder-teaching, determines how it is activated
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Human cooperation is enabled by empathy and regulated through
emotions such as affection, goodwill, gratitude, trust, and confidence;
and also guilt, anger, fear, and resentment
The Historical Village Community
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Renaissance society still has elements of the tribal community
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Most people still live in villages--perhaps 90%
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Even in the cities, craftsmen live in guilds, or stable neighborhoods
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A single morality--or standard of behavior--is preached from
the pulpits
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The world was imagined to be a single coherent body--the
Great Chain of Being
The Late Seventeenth and Early Eighteenth Centuries
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Society is conceived of as a mechanism rather than an organism
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Massive urbanization: people move into spaces without real
communities
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Trade becomes a significant new source of wealth
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Economic efficiency creates room for social mobility and
independence
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The aristocracy loses its idiological dominance
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The new society needs a new set of morals
The Birth of the Novel
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People are looking for a set of social reference points to
orient themselves
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Richardson's Familiar Letters sets out to do this--a
form of elder teaching
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It grows into a novel, Pamela, which functions as
social reference
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Since "examples work more forcibly on the mind than precepts"
(13), the novel--or "biography" as Fielding calls it--is a more effective
form of elder teaching than moral treatises
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The Hollywood bankrobbery on Friday appears to have been
scripted in the movie Heat, down to the costumes
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Fielding claims "emulation … inspires our imitation in an
irresistible manner" (13), and focuses on describing good individuals
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Deceitful behavior will also be depicted, "to hold the glass
to thousands in their closets, that they may contemplate their deformity,
and endeavour to reduce it" (159)
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The kinds of things that can go wrong are depicted, and the
cause is frequently a lack of good advice:
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Leonora ends in a pickle because she gets poor advice from
her aunt
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The female narrator of the story deplores the "blameable
levity in the education of our sex" (109)
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Mr. Wilson imputes all his misfortunes to an "early introduction
into life, without a guide" (170)
But Joseph Andrews does more than describe human nature,
or give a stock set of rules of behavior. It provides--in the figure of
Joseph, the hopeful hero of the emerging middle class--a way of working
out a solution that did not exist before.
Events in Book III
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Adams, Joseph, and Fanny get scared by lights and voices
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They are invited in to Mr. Wilson's house to rest
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He tells them his story of the Rake's Progress
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This is how he becomes a good judge of character, and learns
to see through false appearances--such as the coquettes, who "are never
what they seem" (177)
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Mr. Wilson in a man of the world who has deliberately constructed
his life in the country, drawing on the best of both worlds and creating
his own
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They depart and are entertained by the Roasting Squire
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Ill treated, they flee and take in at The New Inn
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The squire's men come to kidnap Fanny, and succeed
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She is freed by Peter Pounce, Lady Booby's steward
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They cover the final miles to Lady Booby's parish
Commercial society versus traditional agrarian society:
resolving the conflict in a creative conceptual blend
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The Novel is the space where the ideology of the middle class
is developed
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Wilson, the Gentleman Farmer, embodies the virtues of the
self-sufficient man--with money deriving from the wine-business in London
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Desire is acceptable if its gratification does not destabilize
the social order
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Compassion and empathy is reduced by the insulation provided
by a retirement from the world--the forerunner of suburbia--and tempered
by skilful cheater detection
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At the end, Joseph "declares he will imitate [his parents]
in their retirement" (298)--we here have the social referent of choice
D. Reaffirming Destabilized Gender Codes
Events in Book IV
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They all arrive at Booby-Hall
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Lady Booby is still torn between love and pride
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She tells Adams to prevent the match; he refuses
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She enlists lawyer Scout to get rid of them; he acquiesces
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Her nephew Mr. Booby and his wife Pamela arrive
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As Joseph and Fanny are about to be sent to prison, Mr. Booby
frees them
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Lady Booby is jealous of Fanny and schemes to get rid of
her
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She talks her nephew into trying to convince Joseph; Joseph
stands firm
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Beau Didapper accosts her and kisses her on the street
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His servant pimp tries to buy her and rape her, but is beaten
by Joseph
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Mrs. Adams advices the parson to stay out of trouble
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Adams advices Joseph not to love Fanny too much
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The pedlar saves his son Dick from drowning
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Lady Booby and Beau Didapper comes to visit the parson's
house
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Dick reads them the story of Leonard and Paul
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Beau offers Fanny settlements and starts fondling her
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Joseph boxes him on the ear, but a fight is averted
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The pedlar announces that Fanny is Joseph's sister
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Slipslop informs Lady Booby that Beau's servants will kidnap
Fanny
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The project is dropped when they find out she is Fanny Andrews
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The whole gang spends the night at Booby-Hall
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Beau goes to rape Fanny, but ends up in Slipslop's bed
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Slipslop holds on to him and cries rape
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Adams comes and beats up the masculine Slipslop
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Lady Booby discovers them both naked
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Adams returns to his room, but ends up in Fanny's
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Joseph finds them (innocently) together in the morning
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Gammar Andrews reveal the babies had been exchanged
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Mr. Wilson testifies that Joseph is his lost son; Lady B
leaves in agony
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They all go to Mr. Booby's place, celebrate the wedding,
and undress Fanny in front of the narrator, "discovering, not putting off,
ornaments" (297), unlike Shamela, who is "with all the pride of ornament
cast off" (305).
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After a pleasant wedding night, Fanny gets £2,000 from
Mr. Booby, Adams a living of £130 a year, and Joseph and Fanny settle
near his parents.
Reaffirming Destabilized Gender Codes
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In Book I, there is the assumption of a symmetry of gender
codes:
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Female mistresses desire their servants as much as male masters
desire their maids
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Women (Lady Boody, Slipslop, and Betty) are attracted to
men exclusively because of their external appearance and youth, just as
men are conventionally attracted to women for their youth and beauty
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Women attracted to men desire to sleep with them instantly,
just as men conventionally have little inclination to delay consummation
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Male servants have has much reason to preserve their 'virtue'
(chastity) as female maids do
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At the end of Book I and throughout Book II, the traditional
gender codes begin to reassert themselves:
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Betty's active desires are diverted to make her the "the
vanquished one" who "quietly submitted … to her master's will" (72)
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Mrs. Tow-wouse is furious, but mainly at Betty, and quickly
composes herself; his infidelity is no very serious matter
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Leonora makes a fatal female mistake: she is inconstant,
and spends the rest of her life bemoaning it
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Horatio still loves her, she is (for what we know) still
a virgin; the mere knowledge she has loved another spoils her in the respectable
marriage market
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Fanny is rescued from a rapist, after a violent fight: a
lot is clearly at stake
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When Fanny and Joseph meet, Fanny is shy and coy, Joseph
forward and eager
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In Book III, the value of Fanny's virtue in general and virginity
in particular comes to the fore:
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Women do wisely to consider "the many occasions on which
the strength of a man may be useful to you" (163), most notably to keep
other men off
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She is more frightened of men than ghosts (165)
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Mr. Wilson's youth demonstrates what happens to young girls
who don't take care of their virtue
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He ruins a girl promised in marriage to a humbler but better
man; her mind is ruined by the company of other kept mistresses, she steals
money from him and leaves him, and ends up as a prostitute
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The unfaithful wife is abandoned by her husband, and Mr.
Wilson's fondness for her does not last
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Finally, the constant Harriet Hearty wins all his affection,
gets him out of prison, marries him, and has children with him--the perfect
glue in a companionate marriage ("for what union can be so fast as our
common interest in the fruits of our embraces?" (191)
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The Roasting Squire's designs to rape her heighten the sense
of the pivotal value of her virginity; Joseph, tied to the bedpost, agonizes
over her "untained innocence" (225)
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In Book IV, the continued fuss about Fanny's virtue is supplemented
by these final elements:
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Gammar Andrews knowledge about Joseph not being their son
that she conceals from her husband
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How can a husband be sure that his wife's child is his?
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Perhaps men are obsessed with female virtue because men who
didn't care much ended up raising other men's children?
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Fielding proudly announces Fanny is pregant at the end--and
the implication is that Joseph can't possibly have anything to worry about
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© 1997 Francis
F. Steen, Communication Studies, University of California, Los Angeles