The Culture of Sensibility permeates both Burney’s and Austen’s novels. Burney and Austen both use anomalous bodies and minds as a vehicle to explore the performative requirements of the Culture of Sensibility. The performance of disability, including bodily manifestations of nervous disorders, melancholy, and hypochondria, allows sensibility to become visible on the body. This dissertation examines the similarities between Burney’s and Austen’s portrayals of disability in order to understand how Austen’s texts engage and reflect Burney’s influence. Despite the frequency with which disability is necessary for the production of Sensibility, the connection between disability and Sensibility remains unexplored. This dissertation investigates t...
In this study, I argue that certain novels and archival sources of the eighteenth century depict dea...
Arabella of Charlotte Lennox's The Female Quixote and Marianne Dashwood of Jane Austen's Sense and S...
In Jane Austen’s last novel Persuasion (1817), embodiment and disability function metonymically to s...
The Culture of Sensibility permeates both Burney’s and Austen’s novels. Burney and Austen both use a...
For years critics have noticed how Jane Austen uses “a cold, a sore throat, a sprained ankle, or som...
Improvement and cure are frequently on the minds of the characters in Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park. ...
Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park (1814) has received a lot of modern critical attention specifically wit...
Ill health, accident and death are themes common to all of Jane Austen's novels. Some illnesses are ...
Many scholarly studies have examined illness, sickness, and invalidism in British nineteenth-century...
In Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility, propriety presents a mask for the women in the novel to conc...
This project concerns the development of Jane Austen’s criticism of the quality of sensibility, with...
This dissertation brings the field of critical disability studies to bear on organizational paradigm...
The present paper, placing its focus on three of Jane Austen’s canonical texts: Sense and Sensibilit...
This thesis considers the representation of disabled bodies in the fictional and critical writing of...
Austens novels provide a focus on illness, in particular on the fashionable nervous disorders of thi...
In this study, I argue that certain novels and archival sources of the eighteenth century depict dea...
Arabella of Charlotte Lennox's The Female Quixote and Marianne Dashwood of Jane Austen's Sense and S...
In Jane Austen’s last novel Persuasion (1817), embodiment and disability function metonymically to s...
The Culture of Sensibility permeates both Burney’s and Austen’s novels. Burney and Austen both use a...
For years critics have noticed how Jane Austen uses “a cold, a sore throat, a sprained ankle, or som...
Improvement and cure are frequently on the minds of the characters in Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park. ...
Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park (1814) has received a lot of modern critical attention specifically wit...
Ill health, accident and death are themes common to all of Jane Austen's novels. Some illnesses are ...
Many scholarly studies have examined illness, sickness, and invalidism in British nineteenth-century...
In Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility, propriety presents a mask for the women in the novel to conc...
This project concerns the development of Jane Austen’s criticism of the quality of sensibility, with...
This dissertation brings the field of critical disability studies to bear on organizational paradigm...
The present paper, placing its focus on three of Jane Austen’s canonical texts: Sense and Sensibilit...
This thesis considers the representation of disabled bodies in the fictional and critical writing of...
Austens novels provide a focus on illness, in particular on the fashionable nervous disorders of thi...
In this study, I argue that certain novels and archival sources of the eighteenth century depict dea...
Arabella of Charlotte Lennox's The Female Quixote and Marianne Dashwood of Jane Austen's Sense and S...
In Jane Austen’s last novel Persuasion (1817), embodiment and disability function metonymically to s...