Mansfield Park is a novel about selfishness with characters who care more about the comfort of their own worldview than about anyone else.1 The characters are trapped by their chosen perspectives: Mrs. Norris by self-importance; Lady Bertram by indolence; Julia, Maria, and Mary by the desire to attract male attention; Tom by privilege; Sir Thomas by status; and Henry by seductive power. Even Edmund loses his way in his lust for Mary Crawford. Caught by these perspectives, the characters lack the freedom to live full, happy lives. Choosing worldviews intended to fend off suffering, the characters of Mansfield Park bring more suffering to themselves and others. Only Fanny, who materially suffers from the start and outwardly lacks freedom c...
This paper examines the treatment of Maria Bertram in Mansfield Park. She has been criticised on a c...
To insist that Jane Austen was not a theological writer, as several critics do, is to place a caveat...
Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park as a “paradigm of moral activity”The author considers...
Jane Austen wrote Mansfield Park to explore the desire to live morally. and there should be no quest...
The character of Tallis Browne in Iris Murdoch's novel 'A Fairly Honourable Defeat' is characterised...
The purpose of this study is to explain why Jane Austen, the creator of Elizabeth Bennett in Pride a...
132 p.The novel Mansfield Park derives much of its controversy from Jane Austen's creation of a self...
This article uses Jane Austen’s 19th century novel Pride and Prejudice to illustrate the power of li...
This paper explores how the idea of "pastoral Englishness" is represented in Jane Austin's novel, Ma...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the article\u27s first paragraph. Dreams and fantasies provide huma...
Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park (1814) has received a lot of modern critical attention specifically wit...
In early 19th century British culture, an ideology founded on economics permeates one of society’s m...
Focusing on the well-known episode of the theatrical in Mansfield Park, this article relies on recen...
This chapter focuses on the role of reading in Jane Austen’s novel Mansfield Park (1814). I will lo...
This article proposes a comparative reading of Katherine Mansfield’s and Virginia Woolf’s writing in...
This paper examines the treatment of Maria Bertram in Mansfield Park. She has been criticised on a c...
To insist that Jane Austen was not a theological writer, as several critics do, is to place a caveat...
Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park as a “paradigm of moral activity”The author considers...
Jane Austen wrote Mansfield Park to explore the desire to live morally. and there should be no quest...
The character of Tallis Browne in Iris Murdoch's novel 'A Fairly Honourable Defeat' is characterised...
The purpose of this study is to explain why Jane Austen, the creator of Elizabeth Bennett in Pride a...
132 p.The novel Mansfield Park derives much of its controversy from Jane Austen's creation of a self...
This article uses Jane Austen’s 19th century novel Pride and Prejudice to illustrate the power of li...
This paper explores how the idea of "pastoral Englishness" is represented in Jane Austin's novel, Ma...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the article\u27s first paragraph. Dreams and fantasies provide huma...
Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park (1814) has received a lot of modern critical attention specifically wit...
In early 19th century British culture, an ideology founded on economics permeates one of society’s m...
Focusing on the well-known episode of the theatrical in Mansfield Park, this article relies on recen...
This chapter focuses on the role of reading in Jane Austen’s novel Mansfield Park (1814). I will lo...
This article proposes a comparative reading of Katherine Mansfield’s and Virginia Woolf’s writing in...
This paper examines the treatment of Maria Bertram in Mansfield Park. She has been criticised on a c...
To insist that Jane Austen was not a theological writer, as several critics do, is to place a caveat...
Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park as a “paradigm of moral activity”The author considers...