This dissertation explores Jane Austen's six completed novels, Northanger Abb~9y (1818), Sense and Sensibility(1811), Pride and Prejudice (1813), Mansfield Park (1814), Emma (1815), and Persuasion (1818), from the perspectives of classicism and romanticism. It is imperative to investigate her works from these perspectives because she historically belongs to the time of transition from the classical period to the romantic. Although many critics tend to see mainly the notable aspects of classicism in all her novels except Persuasion, I dispute the traditional assessment that Au sten is only a classicist. My dissertation attempts first to explore the classical and romantic aspects in Austen's works by examining her six novels chronologically, ...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Washington, 1956The purpose and scope of this study will be an explorat...
The purpose of this thesis is to compare an early well-developed heroine, Elizabeth Bennet in Pride ...
This study intends to provide further insight and depth into the figure of Marianne Dashwood in the ...
This dissertation explores Jane Austen's six completed novels, Northanger Abb~9y (1818), Sense and S...
This dissertation explores Jane Austen's six completed novels, Northanger Abb~9y (1818), Sense and S...
Within the last few years, a great deal of new information has come to light about Jane Austen\u27s ...
Seeks to explore literary Romanticism and the current debate surrounding this concept as either a us...
Seeks to explore literary Romanticism and the current debate surrounding this concept as either a us...
This MA Thesis is a study of the relationship between Jane Austen's critical views on the novel a...
Austen scholars today do not argue whether Jane Austen is incorporating Romanticism in her novel Per...
This thesis will explore Jane Austen’s social commentary on class structure and boundaries as they e...
Although scholars recently expanded Romanticism to include those beyond the six major poets, a consi...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityThe major portion of Part One of the dissertation is a study of the...
This study examines the settings in Jane Austen's six novels. Chapter I introduces the topic general...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Washington, 1956The purpose and scope of this study will be an explorat...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Washington, 1956The purpose and scope of this study will be an explorat...
The purpose of this thesis is to compare an early well-developed heroine, Elizabeth Bennet in Pride ...
This study intends to provide further insight and depth into the figure of Marianne Dashwood in the ...
This dissertation explores Jane Austen's six completed novels, Northanger Abb~9y (1818), Sense and S...
This dissertation explores Jane Austen's six completed novels, Northanger Abb~9y (1818), Sense and S...
Within the last few years, a great deal of new information has come to light about Jane Austen\u27s ...
Seeks to explore literary Romanticism and the current debate surrounding this concept as either a us...
Seeks to explore literary Romanticism and the current debate surrounding this concept as either a us...
This MA Thesis is a study of the relationship between Jane Austen's critical views on the novel a...
Austen scholars today do not argue whether Jane Austen is incorporating Romanticism in her novel Per...
This thesis will explore Jane Austen’s social commentary on class structure and boundaries as they e...
Although scholars recently expanded Romanticism to include those beyond the six major poets, a consi...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityThe major portion of Part One of the dissertation is a study of the...
This study examines the settings in Jane Austen's six novels. Chapter I introduces the topic general...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Washington, 1956The purpose and scope of this study will be an explorat...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Washington, 1956The purpose and scope of this study will be an explorat...
The purpose of this thesis is to compare an early well-developed heroine, Elizabeth Bennet in Pride ...
This study intends to provide further insight and depth into the figure of Marianne Dashwood in the ...