This thesis is an examination of how Jane Austen portrayed trauma and traumatic experiences progressively in her heroines in four of her novels; Sense and Sensibility 1811, Pride and Prejudice 1813, Mansfield Park 1814, and Persuasion 1817; These four novels are examined to depict how Austen evolved in portraying the type and depth of trauma progressively on her heroines, and how that is related to the distant war that was occurring on away from England. The Trauma that has been examined can be classified into two main categories: Trauma that occurred in childhood and/or early adolescent years for these heroines, as well as trauma that occurred during adulthood. The thesis examines how the trauma in the childhood of these heroines, namely F...
In this thesis, the writer chooses literature as the subject of her study. It is because literature ...
This thesis deals with autobiographical reflections in selected novels of Jane Austen. The theoretic...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 92-95).This thesis argues that Jane Austen’s novels are more...
Ill health, accident and death are themes common to all of Jane Austen's novels. Some illnesses are ...
Austens novels provide a focus on illness, in particular on the fashionable nervous disorders of thi...
In the novels Jane Eyre and A Farewell to Arms, Charlotte Brontë and Ernest Hemingway both display c...
The novel Persuasion by Jane Austen stands out from her canon partly due to the explicit reflection ...
Beginning as early as the 1790s and continuing throughout the nineteenth century, it is possible to ...
This dissertation argues that the British trauma novel emerged at the turn of the nineteenth century...
This thesis will explore Jane Austen’s social commentary on class structure and boundaries as they e...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Washington, 1956The purpose and scope of this study will be an explorat...
This dissertation aims to analyze the major characters of Jane Austen’s novels Pride and Prejudice a...
Within the last few years, a great deal of new information has come to light about Jane Austen\u27s ...
In Jane Austen’s last novel Persuasion (1817), embodiment and disability function metonymically to s...
This dissertation argues that Jane Austen’s novels present an ethics of crisis: characters must lear...
In this thesis, the writer chooses literature as the subject of her study. It is because literature ...
This thesis deals with autobiographical reflections in selected novels of Jane Austen. The theoretic...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 92-95).This thesis argues that Jane Austen’s novels are more...
Ill health, accident and death are themes common to all of Jane Austen's novels. Some illnesses are ...
Austens novels provide a focus on illness, in particular on the fashionable nervous disorders of thi...
In the novels Jane Eyre and A Farewell to Arms, Charlotte Brontë and Ernest Hemingway both display c...
The novel Persuasion by Jane Austen stands out from her canon partly due to the explicit reflection ...
Beginning as early as the 1790s and continuing throughout the nineteenth century, it is possible to ...
This dissertation argues that the British trauma novel emerged at the turn of the nineteenth century...
This thesis will explore Jane Austen’s social commentary on class structure and boundaries as they e...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Washington, 1956The purpose and scope of this study will be an explorat...
This dissertation aims to analyze the major characters of Jane Austen’s novels Pride and Prejudice a...
Within the last few years, a great deal of new information has come to light about Jane Austen\u27s ...
In Jane Austen’s last novel Persuasion (1817), embodiment and disability function metonymically to s...
This dissertation argues that Jane Austen’s novels present an ethics of crisis: characters must lear...
In this thesis, the writer chooses literature as the subject of her study. It is because literature ...
This thesis deals with autobiographical reflections in selected novels of Jane Austen. The theoretic...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 92-95).This thesis argues that Jane Austen’s novels are more...