Pride and Prejudice

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Broadview Press, 2001 M12 20 - 493 páginas

Elizabeth Bennet is Austen’s most liberated and unambiguously appealing heroine, and Pride and Prejudice has remained over most of the past two centuries Austen’s most popular novel. The story turns on the marriage prospects of the five daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Bennet: Elizabeth forms a prejudice against the proud and distant Mr. Darcy; Darcy’s charming friend Charles Bingley falls in love with her sister Jane; and the handsome officer George Wickham forms attachments successively to Elizabeth and to her sister Lydia.

Irvine’s extensive introduction sets the novel in the context of the literary and intellectual history of the period, and deals with such crucial background issues as early-nineteenth century class relations in Britain, and female exclusion from property and power. The appendices present an unrivaled selection of background contextual documents.

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Contenido

Acknowledgements
7
Introduction
9
a Brief Chronology
36
A Note on the Text
39
PRIDE AND PREJUDICE
43
VOLUME II
161
Parliamentary Debate on the Marriage Act of 1754
387
From the Conduct Books
394
Burke on the French Revolution
413
Discussion of Womens Role after the French Revolution
419
Domestic Tourism
443
The Militia Regiments on the South Coast of England in 179395
449
Austens Letters to her Sister on the Publication of Pride and Prejudice
478
Contemporary Periodical Reviews of Pride and Prejudice
482
Select Bibliography
489
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Acerca del autor (2001)

Robert P. Irvine of the Department of English Literature, University of Edinburgh, has previously published on Smollett and Scott.

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