This paper deals with illnesses, real and imagined, in Jane Austen’s world, and her writing as a means of coping with the sickness she witnessed and experienced herself. The paper explores “real” illness in the books and the remedies and healing, physical and mental, then contrasts these with the imagined illnesses in the later novels — and the role of the hypochondriac. Laughing at the these imagined illness perhaps functioned as a coping device as Jane, herself, became more ill and faced death
For years critics have noticed how Jane Austen uses “a cold, a sore throat, a sprained ankle, or som...
This article proposes, a reading of Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey (1818) as a case study for discus...
The word “cordial” in this dissertation’s title represents its concerns with both emotional and biom...
Ill health, accident and death are themes common to all of Jane Austen's novels. Some illnesses are ...
Starting from biographical evidence about the role of disability within the Austen family, this arti...
The present paper, placing its focus on three of Jane Austen’s canonical texts: Sense and Sensibilit...
Improvement and cure are frequently on the minds of the characters in Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park. ...
My thesis applies the critical lens of disability studies to the Victorian public health crisis, and...
Jane Austen\u27s novel Persuasion features characters suffering from various ailments, including dep...
This thesis discusses Jane Austen’s medical knowledge and shows that the representations of health a...
In Jane Austen’s last novel Persuasion (1817), embodiment and disability function metonymically to s...
Austens novels provide a focus on illness, in particular on the fashionable nervous disorders of thi...
I’m going to be talking about the role of illness in Jane Austen’s novels, but I want to begin with ...
What I will explore in my dissertation is the world of Jane Austen’s typical genre, the comedy of m...
The last works of Jane Austen and Barbara Pym, written while each was knowingly dying, both continue...
For years critics have noticed how Jane Austen uses “a cold, a sore throat, a sprained ankle, or som...
This article proposes, a reading of Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey (1818) as a case study for discus...
The word “cordial” in this dissertation’s title represents its concerns with both emotional and biom...
Ill health, accident and death are themes common to all of Jane Austen's novels. Some illnesses are ...
Starting from biographical evidence about the role of disability within the Austen family, this arti...
The present paper, placing its focus on three of Jane Austen’s canonical texts: Sense and Sensibilit...
Improvement and cure are frequently on the minds of the characters in Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park. ...
My thesis applies the critical lens of disability studies to the Victorian public health crisis, and...
Jane Austen\u27s novel Persuasion features characters suffering from various ailments, including dep...
This thesis discusses Jane Austen’s medical knowledge and shows that the representations of health a...
In Jane Austen’s last novel Persuasion (1817), embodiment and disability function metonymically to s...
Austens novels provide a focus on illness, in particular on the fashionable nervous disorders of thi...
I’m going to be talking about the role of illness in Jane Austen’s novels, but I want to begin with ...
What I will explore in my dissertation is the world of Jane Austen’s typical genre, the comedy of m...
The last works of Jane Austen and Barbara Pym, written while each was knowingly dying, both continue...
For years critics have noticed how Jane Austen uses “a cold, a sore throat, a sprained ankle, or som...
This article proposes, a reading of Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey (1818) as a case study for discus...
The word “cordial” in this dissertation’s title represents its concerns with both emotional and biom...