Orna Me: Laurence Sterne’s Open Letter to Literary History

This essay considers the curious way Laurence Sterne communicates with and reflects on his literary predecessors, most often Alexander Pope, by writing love letters to women. Focusing primarily on his correspondence with Elizabeth Draper, Barnes contends that, even as Sterne looks back to Pope to gu...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Celia B. Barnes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ghent University 2016-12-01
Series:Authorship
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.authorship.ugent.be/article/view/3878
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spelling doaj-44e90c68186749109729b5f0e0c771ea2020-11-24T23:02:02ZengGhent UniversityAuthorship2034-46432016-12-015210.21825/aj.v5i2.38783771Orna Me: Laurence Sterne’s Open Letter to Literary HistoryCelia B. Barnes0Lawrence UniversityThis essay considers the curious way Laurence Sterne communicates with and reflects on his literary predecessors, most often Alexander Pope, by writing love letters to women. Focusing primarily on his correspondence with Elizabeth Draper, Barnes contends that, even as Sterne looks back to Pope to guarantee himself a place in literary history, he looks forward to women like Draper to ensure his name will survive.  Thus, erotic correspondence becomes an important way of ensuring Sterne’s literary estate, or as he terms it, his “futurity.” “Orna Me”—a phrase that means, roughly, “ornament me” or “set me off,” and that Sterne got from Pope and Swift, who got it from Cicero—allows Sterne to plug in to a literary tradition that privileges collaboration: append something of yours to something of mine. It is this idea of letter-writing as correspondence, a collaborative process between friends or lovers, that unites Sterne to his female correspondent and to literary tradition all at once.https://www.authorship.ugent.be/article/view/3878Celia B. BarnesLaurence SternePopeSwiftElizabeth Draperorna me
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Celia B. Barnes
spellingShingle Celia B. Barnes
Orna Me: Laurence Sterne’s Open Letter to Literary History
Authorship
Celia B. Barnes
Laurence Sterne
Pope
Swift
Elizabeth Draper
orna me
author_facet Celia B. Barnes
author_sort Celia B. Barnes
title Orna Me: Laurence Sterne’s Open Letter to Literary History
title_short Orna Me: Laurence Sterne’s Open Letter to Literary History
title_full Orna Me: Laurence Sterne’s Open Letter to Literary History
title_fullStr Orna Me: Laurence Sterne’s Open Letter to Literary History
title_full_unstemmed Orna Me: Laurence Sterne’s Open Letter to Literary History
title_sort orna me: laurence sterne’s open letter to literary history
publisher Ghent University
series Authorship
issn 2034-4643
publishDate 2016-12-01
description This essay considers the curious way Laurence Sterne communicates with and reflects on his literary predecessors, most often Alexander Pope, by writing love letters to women. Focusing primarily on his correspondence with Elizabeth Draper, Barnes contends that, even as Sterne looks back to Pope to guarantee himself a place in literary history, he looks forward to women like Draper to ensure his name will survive.  Thus, erotic correspondence becomes an important way of ensuring Sterne’s literary estate, or as he terms it, his “futurity.” “Orna Me”—a phrase that means, roughly, “ornament me” or “set me off,” and that Sterne got from Pope and Swift, who got it from Cicero—allows Sterne to plug in to a literary tradition that privileges collaboration: append something of yours to something of mine. It is this idea of letter-writing as correspondence, a collaborative process between friends or lovers, that unites Sterne to his female correspondent and to literary tradition all at once.
topic Celia B. Barnes
Laurence Sterne
Pope
Swift
Elizabeth Draper
orna me
url https://www.authorship.ugent.be/article/view/3878
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