Laurence Sterne is famous as a bawdy humorist and a formal innovator of the novel. Like
A Sentimental Journey, Sterne’s more famous novel,
The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentlemen, displays his penchant for dirty jokes, double meanings, and digressive anecdotes. Several characters from
Tristram Shandy also make appearances in
A Sentimental Journey, including
A Sentimental Journey’s narrator, Mr. Yorick—whose name comes from Shakespeare’s
Hamlet, where Yorick is the (now deceased) jester of the former king of Denmark. The character Mr. Yorick also serves as the pseudonymous author of Sterne’s own homilies in
The Sermons of Mr. Yorick, published in four volumes (1760 and 1766). Sterne loved and was inspired by a much earlier bawdy humorist, François Rabelais, a 16th-century French writer most famous for
The Life of Gargantua and of Pantagruel, a risqué and satirical series of books about a father and son, both giants. One of Sterne’s contemporaries, Tobias Smollett, negatively inspired Sterne by writing
Travels through France and Italy (1766), a xenophobic nonfiction travelogue. Scholars believe that Sterne is satirizing Smollett’s work throughout
A Sentimental Journey and that the character Smelfungus is a mocking portrait of Smollett. Finally, Sterne inspired other writers in turn; for example, the twentieth-century Russian literary theorist and novelist Viktor Shklovsky named his early work
A Sentimental Journey: Memoirs, 1917-1922 (1923) as an homage to Sterne.