Maria Edgeworth and Jane Austen belonged to the same generation of women novelists, and both were well acquainted with the literary world of their time. Especially focused on novel writing, they created, in similar and dissimilar ways, new forms of the popular genre of the realistic novel of domestic life, the so-called ‘novel of manners’, that their predecessors had experimented before them and their generation took inspiration from and imitated with success. This essay analyses Edgeworth’s use of this genre in her novel "Belinda" (1801) as a complex story from real life and its interlink with Jane Austen’s novels of manners with special attention to "Pride and Prejudice" (1813). Specifically, this essay investigates how both writers, Edge...
The Church of England, the greatest Anglican establishment and the symbol of Great Britain's imperia...
The Church of England, the greatest Anglican establishment and the symbol of Great Britain's imperia...
This essay combines a stylistic analysis of the first part of Maria Edgeworth\u27s Letters for Liter...
Maria Edgeworth and Jane Austen belonged to the same generation of women novelists, and both were we...
During the period in which Maria Edgeworth wrote novels, novel-reading was a disreputable activity, ...
Known for influencing widely studied authors such as Jane Austen and Sir Walter Scott, Maria Edgewor...
The purpose of this thesis is to study the novels of Maria Edgeworth in an attempt to discover wheth...
This thesis presents an in-depth analysis of the gender portrayal and their mutual inter-relations i...
The overall purpose of this thesis is to compare and contrast Jane Austen’s intentions behind the po...
In the field of British literature, it is well established that during the eighteenth century the no...
A major part of Jane Austen\u27s novels consists of a critique of the societal conventions that were...
Literary works offer a sense of pleasure as well as human values. They teach people to love their ow...
Jane Austen is considered as one of the greatest pioneers of the feminist movement in English Litera...
Examining the cultural and literary tropes of reading in late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-centu...
Jane Austen’s men are central to her immortality and enduring appeal in the twenty-first century. Th...
The Church of England, the greatest Anglican establishment and the symbol of Great Britain's imperia...
The Church of England, the greatest Anglican establishment and the symbol of Great Britain's imperia...
This essay combines a stylistic analysis of the first part of Maria Edgeworth\u27s Letters for Liter...
Maria Edgeworth and Jane Austen belonged to the same generation of women novelists, and both were we...
During the period in which Maria Edgeworth wrote novels, novel-reading was a disreputable activity, ...
Known for influencing widely studied authors such as Jane Austen and Sir Walter Scott, Maria Edgewor...
The purpose of this thesis is to study the novels of Maria Edgeworth in an attempt to discover wheth...
This thesis presents an in-depth analysis of the gender portrayal and their mutual inter-relations i...
The overall purpose of this thesis is to compare and contrast Jane Austen’s intentions behind the po...
In the field of British literature, it is well established that during the eighteenth century the no...
A major part of Jane Austen\u27s novels consists of a critique of the societal conventions that were...
Literary works offer a sense of pleasure as well as human values. They teach people to love their ow...
Jane Austen is considered as one of the greatest pioneers of the feminist movement in English Litera...
Examining the cultural and literary tropes of reading in late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-centu...
Jane Austen’s men are central to her immortality and enduring appeal in the twenty-first century. Th...
The Church of England, the greatest Anglican establishment and the symbol of Great Britain's imperia...
The Church of England, the greatest Anglican establishment and the symbol of Great Britain's imperia...
This essay combines a stylistic analysis of the first part of Maria Edgeworth\u27s Letters for Liter...