This chapter traces the critical history of Charles Brockden Brown’s Jane Talbot from the dominant reception of it as a failed novel and a capitulation to a gendered consumer market and political conservatism. Yet Jane Talbot deserves to be read not as expressing the rising interests of liberalism and imperialist nationalism but as critiquing their emergence, while also standing as a retrospective consideration of the flaws of 1790s Woldwinite claims for rational sentiment and progressive emulation as a mechanism for social betterment. Jane Talbot stands as one of the first American literary productions that self-consciously understands itself as a novel (rather than a “romance”) while also suggesting the limits to the novel form in a perio...
Although Austen\u27s novels have always been open to widely divergent interpretations, the two basic...
Jane Eyre, a classic and now firmly canonical fiction, is not only recognized as a milestone in Engl...
Many-Sided Lives argues that nineteenth-century novels by Jane Austen, George Eliot and others train...
357 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1993.Brown's life spanned the deca...
Starting from Immanuel Wallerstein's argument that that twentieth-century and contemporary disciplin...
Scholars of eighteenth-century and Victorian fiction associate literary realism with Lockean liberal...
This study maintains that Charles Brockden Brown promoted his political agendas--including a strong ...
By Elizabeth Jane Wall Hinds, College at Brockport faculty member. Private Property explores Charles...
In 1847, when Charlotte Brontë was writing Jane Eyre in Haworth parsonage and secretly dreaming of h...
Jane Austen's novels seem to be specimen stories of containment and regulation. Indeed, Austen artic...
Over the past few decades, the writings of Charles Brockden Brown (1771-1810) have reclaimed a place...
This chapter focuses on the role of reading in Jane Austen’s novel Mansfield Park (1814). I will lo...
In the later eighteenth and earlier nineteenth centuries novels were believed to have the power to s...
This study examines the social, political, and economic contexts in which Northanger Abby, Jane Aust...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis traces and identifies dialectical elements in Ja...
Although Austen\u27s novels have always been open to widely divergent interpretations, the two basic...
Jane Eyre, a classic and now firmly canonical fiction, is not only recognized as a milestone in Engl...
Many-Sided Lives argues that nineteenth-century novels by Jane Austen, George Eliot and others train...
357 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1993.Brown's life spanned the deca...
Starting from Immanuel Wallerstein's argument that that twentieth-century and contemporary disciplin...
Scholars of eighteenth-century and Victorian fiction associate literary realism with Lockean liberal...
This study maintains that Charles Brockden Brown promoted his political agendas--including a strong ...
By Elizabeth Jane Wall Hinds, College at Brockport faculty member. Private Property explores Charles...
In 1847, when Charlotte Brontë was writing Jane Eyre in Haworth parsonage and secretly dreaming of h...
Jane Austen's novels seem to be specimen stories of containment and regulation. Indeed, Austen artic...
Over the past few decades, the writings of Charles Brockden Brown (1771-1810) have reclaimed a place...
This chapter focuses on the role of reading in Jane Austen’s novel Mansfield Park (1814). I will lo...
In the later eighteenth and earlier nineteenth centuries novels were believed to have the power to s...
This study examines the social, political, and economic contexts in which Northanger Abby, Jane Aust...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis traces and identifies dialectical elements in Ja...
Although Austen\u27s novels have always been open to widely divergent interpretations, the two basic...
Jane Eyre, a classic and now firmly canonical fiction, is not only recognized as a milestone in Engl...
Many-Sided Lives argues that nineteenth-century novels by Jane Austen, George Eliot and others train...