Thesis (M.A., English (Literature)) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2009.Despite her early experiments with the epistolary form, none of Jane Austen???s published novels are in the epistolary form. However, all of Austen???s novels contain letters, many of which are crucial to the development of the story. This paper will explore the role and function of letters in Austen's novels. Looking closely at each letter, we will see how Austen uses letters to reveal character and advance plot. We will also see how writing letters gives Austen???s characters a rhetorical voice, and how letters forge communication when it is otherwise impossible (not only physically, but socially and emotionally as well). Finally, we will explore how lett...
183 pagesThis dissertation uncovers the crucial role that chapter epigraphs played in the evolution ...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 254-264) and index.Preface: The Public Letter, or 'La Let...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Washington, 1956The purpose and scope of this study will be an explorat...
As a medium of communication, written letters stand apart not only in the intimacy of the connection...
The thesis is about the importance of letter writing in Austen s novels. I focus on the following as...
This project is a literary analysis of two of Jane Austen’s novels: Pride and Prejudice and Persuasi...
Jane Austen revises the sentimental epistolary tradition by introducing a structural epistolarity th...
Though published a year apart, Jane Austen first wrote Pride and Prejudice (1813) and Mansfield Park...
The article traces the history of Austen's representation through a short survey of the early biogra...
grantor: University of TorontoAlthough the letter has long been valued as an object of mat...
This paper uses a new historical lens to examine the following question: In what ways do Jane Austen...
A number of recent critical works apply twentieth century literary theories to eighteenth- and ninet...
Jane Austen wrote six novels during the late 18th and early 19th century. As this was a time before ...
When the novel rose to prominence in the eighteenth century, it often employed the epistolary form, ...
Forming Letters is a literary, rhetorical and socio-historical examination of women's mid-nineteenth...
183 pagesThis dissertation uncovers the crucial role that chapter epigraphs played in the evolution ...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 254-264) and index.Preface: The Public Letter, or 'La Let...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Washington, 1956The purpose and scope of this study will be an explorat...
As a medium of communication, written letters stand apart not only in the intimacy of the connection...
The thesis is about the importance of letter writing in Austen s novels. I focus on the following as...
This project is a literary analysis of two of Jane Austen’s novels: Pride and Prejudice and Persuasi...
Jane Austen revises the sentimental epistolary tradition by introducing a structural epistolarity th...
Though published a year apart, Jane Austen first wrote Pride and Prejudice (1813) and Mansfield Park...
The article traces the history of Austen's representation through a short survey of the early biogra...
grantor: University of TorontoAlthough the letter has long been valued as an object of mat...
This paper uses a new historical lens to examine the following question: In what ways do Jane Austen...
A number of recent critical works apply twentieth century literary theories to eighteenth- and ninet...
Jane Austen wrote six novels during the late 18th and early 19th century. As this was a time before ...
When the novel rose to prominence in the eighteenth century, it often employed the epistolary form, ...
Forming Letters is a literary, rhetorical and socio-historical examination of women's mid-nineteenth...
183 pagesThis dissertation uncovers the crucial role that chapter epigraphs played in the evolution ...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 254-264) and index.Preface: The Public Letter, or 'La Let...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Washington, 1956The purpose and scope of this study will be an explorat...