Searching for Jane AustenUniversity of Wisconsin Press, 2004 - 344 páginas Searching for Jane Austen demolishes with wit and vivacity the often-held view of "Jane," a decorous maiden aunt writing her small drawing-room stories of teas and balls. Emily Auerbach presents a different Jane Austen--a brilliant writer who, despite the obstacles facing women of her time, worked seriously on improving her craft and became one of the world's greatest novelists, a master of wit, irony, and character development. In this beautifully illustrated and lively work, Auerbach surveys two centuries of editing, censoring, and distorting Austen's life and writings. Auerbach samples Austen's flamboyant, risqué adolescent works featuring heroines who get drunk, lie, steal, raise armies, and throw rivals out of windows. She demonstrates that Austen constantly tested and improved her skills by setting herself a new challenge in each of her six novels. In addition, Auerbach considers Austen's final irreverent writings, discusses her tragic death at the age of forty-one, and ferrets out ridiculous modern adaptations and illustrations, including ads, cartoons, book jackets, newspaper articles, plays, and films from our own time. An appendix reprints a ground-breaking article that introduced Mark Twain's "Jane Austen," an unfinished and unforgettable essay in which Twain and Austen enter into mortal combat. |
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Página 31
... called the happy marriages in Austen's novels “ a kind of compensation daydream for her failure in real life , ” a remark perhaps suggesting that he needed to reread his wife's A Room of One's Own.68 Benét's Reader's Encyclopedia ...
... called the happy marriages in Austen's novels “ a kind of compensation daydream for her failure in real life , ” a remark perhaps suggesting that he needed to reread his wife's A Room of One's Own.68 Benét's Reader's Encyclopedia ...
Página 157
... called into question earlier in the novel as “ so hackneyed , so doubtful , so indefinite , that it gives ... very little idea , " a phrase " as often applied to feelings which arise from an half - hour's acquaintance , as to a real ...
... called into question earlier in the novel as “ so hackneyed , so doubtful , so indefinite , that it gives ... very little idea , " a phrase " as often applied to feelings which arise from an half - hour's acquaintance , as to a real ...
Página 167
... called " What Became of Jane Austen ? " novelist and critic Kingsley Amis wondered why the creator of Catherine Morland , Marianne and Elinor Dashwood , and Elizabeth Bennet invented such an unappealing weak- ling as the heroine of ...
... called " What Became of Jane Austen ? " novelist and critic Kingsley Amis wondered why the creator of Catherine Morland , Marianne and Elinor Dashwood , and Elizabeth Bennet invented such an unappealing weak- ling as the heroine of ...
Índice
Putting Her Down and Touching Her Up | 3 |
Jane Austens Early Writings | 41 |
Northanger Abbey | 70 |
Direitos de autor | |
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