Austen’s juvenilia is a fruitful entry point into the late-eighteenth- and early-nineteenth-century field of “conservative” female-authored fiction centred on the development and education of adult or near-adult women. Austen is, in her treatment of female education, a highly revisionist conservative, but also, in terms of adventurousness, range of ideas, and ambitions, much more conservative than public-minded conservative writers of the 1790s, such as Clara Reeve, or some of Austen’s own contemporaries, such as Mary Brunton. It is also possible to argue that Austen’s deep scepticism about the pressures of education as ideology operating on women makes her, by a double turn, not a conservative writer. The instability and unviability of rad...
Jane Austen's novels are not novels of education in the traditionally limited sense, for her heroine...
Jane Austen\u27s attitude toward the position of middle-class women at the end of the eighteenth cen...
Feminism in Jane Austen’s novels is inseparable from education, although of course the former term w...
The wealth of criticism on Jane Austen and her fiction—recent feminist criticism in particular—negle...
Jane Austen's novels seem to be specimen stories of containment and regulation. Indeed, Austen artic...
Modern criticism and scholarship on the novels of Jane Austen owemuch to the cumulative body of crit...
Jane Austen is one of the greatest realistic novelists in the English literaturein19th century. Aust...
The romantic gothic novel was ripe for parody and criticism upon Northanger Abbey’s publication in 1...
This essay addresses the issues of self-representation in women’s writing of the early nineteenth-ce...
Analysing the topic of protofeminism in three Jane Austen’s novels: Pride and Prejudice, Emma and Ma...
Although Austen\u27s novels have always been open to widely divergent interpretations, the two basic...
Restricted until 25 Nov. 2011."Women Readers and the Victorian Jane Austen" reveals how the study of...
This study of Jane Austen's six novels examines the relationship of comedy and education. Austen car...
This thesis examines the influence of the proto-feminist ideas of the Enlightenment on Jane Austen’s...
Jane Austen is an author whose works and reputation have won the hearts of readers in all corners of...
Jane Austen's novels are not novels of education in the traditionally limited sense, for her heroine...
Jane Austen\u27s attitude toward the position of middle-class women at the end of the eighteenth cen...
Feminism in Jane Austen’s novels is inseparable from education, although of course the former term w...
The wealth of criticism on Jane Austen and her fiction—recent feminist criticism in particular—negle...
Jane Austen's novels seem to be specimen stories of containment and regulation. Indeed, Austen artic...
Modern criticism and scholarship on the novels of Jane Austen owemuch to the cumulative body of crit...
Jane Austen is one of the greatest realistic novelists in the English literaturein19th century. Aust...
The romantic gothic novel was ripe for parody and criticism upon Northanger Abbey’s publication in 1...
This essay addresses the issues of self-representation in women’s writing of the early nineteenth-ce...
Analysing the topic of protofeminism in three Jane Austen’s novels: Pride and Prejudice, Emma and Ma...
Although Austen\u27s novels have always been open to widely divergent interpretations, the two basic...
Restricted until 25 Nov. 2011."Women Readers and the Victorian Jane Austen" reveals how the study of...
This study of Jane Austen's six novels examines the relationship of comedy and education. Austen car...
This thesis examines the influence of the proto-feminist ideas of the Enlightenment on Jane Austen’s...
Jane Austen is an author whose works and reputation have won the hearts of readers in all corners of...
Jane Austen's novels are not novels of education in the traditionally limited sense, for her heroine...
Jane Austen\u27s attitude toward the position of middle-class women at the end of the eighteenth cen...
Feminism in Jane Austen’s novels is inseparable from education, although of course the former term w...