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. |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-3 de 89
Página 73
... novel also employs the word adventure more ( " my heroine was involved in one of her most alarming adventures ” ) , even though Austen's other novels present young women who nearly die , are knocked unconscious , go to sea on a man - of ...
... novel also employs the word adventure more ( " my heroine was involved in one of her most alarming adventures ” ) , even though Austen's other novels present young women who nearly die , are knocked unconscious , go to sea on a man - of ...
Página 93
... novels . Early on in the novel , Austen uses the reading habits of the instantly inti- mate Isabella and Catherine as an excuse to launch into a rare and eloquent essay on her own craft : " They . shut themselves up , to read novels ...
... novels . Early on in the novel , Austen uses the reading habits of the instantly inti- mate Isabella and Catherine as an excuse to launch into a rare and eloquent essay on her own craft : " They . shut themselves up , to read novels ...
Página 112
... novel's end Elinor has dropped this irritatingly parental tone because she knows that her own maturing process was far from over . Perhaps she might now admit the truth of Blaise Pascal's remark , " Le coeur a ses raisons que la raison ...
... novel's end Elinor has dropped this irritatingly parental tone because she knows that her own maturing process was far from over . Perhaps she might now admit the truth of Blaise Pascal's remark , " Le coeur a ses raisons que la raison ...
Índice
Putting Her Down and Touching Her Up | 3 |
Jane Austens Early Writings | 41 |
Northanger Abbey | 70 |
Direitos de autor | |
9 outras secções não apresentadas
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Palavras e frases frequentes
Admiral Anne appear Aunt Austen-Leigh beauty become Bennet brother called Captain Catherine chapter characters Critical Croft Darcy Dashwood describes early Edward Elinor Elizabeth Elliot Emma eyes fact Fanny father feel fiction girl give happy heart Henry hero heroine human idea imagination included interesting Jane Austen John kind Knightley lack Lady laugh letter literary lively London look Lydia manners Mansfield Park Marianne marriage married Mary mean mind Miss nature never Northanger Abbey notes novel observes offer perhaps person Persuasion play poem present Press Price Pride and Prejudice readers reference remains remarks romantic seems Sense and Sensibility shows sister speak story suggests talk tells thing Thomas thought tion turns Twain University voice Wentworth wife woman women write York young