Jane AustenPsychology Press, 2005 - 190 páginas Jane Austen is one of England's most enduringly popular authors, renowned for her subtle observations of the provincial middle classes of late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century England.
Part of the Routledge Guides to Literature series, this volume is essential reading for all those beginning detailed study of Jane Austen and seeking not only a guide to her works but also a way through the wealth of contextual and critical material that surrounds them. |
Contenido
hierarchy modernity and gender | 5 |
writing publicity and the market | 11 |
Austen in literary history I | 17 |
Austen in literary history 2 26 2223 | 26 |
Works | 39 |
Sense and Sensibility | 48 |
Pride and Prejudice | 56 |
Mansfield Park | 62 |
Criticism | 91 |
Austen and society | 114 |
Austen and feminism | 124 |
Austen empire and nationality | 134 |
Austen on screen | 148 |
Austen consumption and history | 156 |
Bibliography | 166 |
181 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
Anne Anne's argues Austen's novels Bennet Bertram Bildungsroman Bingley Catherine characters Claudia Johnson conservative context critics culture Darcy Darcy's Dashwood discussion domestic economic Edmund Elinor Elizabeth Elizabeth Bennet Emma Emma's emotional England English essay example Fanny Fanny's feeling female feminine feminist film Frances Burney free indirect discourse French French Revolution gender genre gentry Gothic Gothic novel Greenfield 1998 Henry heroine hierarchy Highbury historical identify imagined individual inherited irony Jane Austen Johnson judgement Knightley Lady landowner literary male Mansfield Park Marianne marriage marry Mary masculine modern moral authority narrative narrator Northanger Abbey novelist particular Pemberley perspective Persuasion plot political Pride and Prejudice produced published reader reading relation represent Revolution role romance seen Sense and Sensibility sentimental sexual Sir Thomas sister slave social society Sourcebook edited specific story suggests Troost and Greenfield Wentworth Wollstonecraft woman women writers writing