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Austen's Unbecoming Conjunctions
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 279

Austen's Unbecoming Conjunctions

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2016-04-30
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  • Publisher: Springer

Austen'sUnbecomingConjunctions is a contemporary study of all Jane Austen's writings focusing on her representation of women, sexuality, the material objects, and linguistic patterns by which this sexuality was expressed. Heydt-Stevenson demonstrates the subtle, vulgar, and humorous ways Austen uses human bodies, objects, and activities (fashion, jewelry, crafts, popular literature, travel and tourism, money, and courtship rituals) to convey sexuality and sexual appetites. Through the sexual subtext, Heydt-Stevenson proposes, Austen satirized contemporary sexual hypocrisy; overcame the stereotypes of women authors as sexually inhibited, sheltered, or repressed; and addressed as sophisticated and worldly an audience as Byron's. Thus through her careful reading of all the Austen texts in light of the language of eroticism, both traditional and contemporary, Heydt-Stevenson re-evaluates Austen's audience, the novels, and her role as a writer.

Embodied Experience in British and French Literature, 1778-1814
  • Language: en

Embodied Experience in British and French Literature, 1778-1814

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2024
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  • Publisher: Unknown

"Combining feminist, materialist, and comparatist approaches, Jillian Heydt-Stevenson reveals evocative and hidden information about objects like diamonds, hats, and statues, demonstrating women's life-preserving ecological, social, and political connections to material things in literature from the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries"--

Lessons of Romanticism
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 492

Lessons of Romanticism

  • Categories: Art

Explores how the Romantic period gave birth to a seductive cognitive cultural program that retains far reaching implications for contemporary views on individuality and relationships between the individual and larger groups of identification. Established

Recognizing the Romantic Novel
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 358

Recognizing the Romantic Novel

The field of literature changed dramatically at the end of the eighteenth century, as under the shadow of Romanticism the novel became the most important literary genre of its day. Often neglected, the novels of the Romantic era puzzle critics yet are much more concerned with the unexpected, the unconventional, and the uncanny than their immediate predecessors or successors, and their authors include some of the most important novelists of British literary history—Jane Austen, Fanny Burney, James Hogg, Mary Shelley, and Sir Walter Scott among them. Featuring contributions from distinguished scholars in the field, Recognizing the Romantic Novel evaluates the vibrancy and centrality of the Romantic novel, showcasing the important new voices and directions in the field and showing it can hold its own in the canon of literary scholarship. “These essays offer us a lens through which we may recognize the Romantic novel as it has never been recognized before.”—Times Literary Supplement

The Legacy of the Moral Tale
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 249

The Legacy of the Moral Tale

"The Legacy of the Moral Tale made me understand in a way I never had before the form’s complexity and vitality—and, most of all, its centrality to any reading of nineteenth-century British literature. Fleming’s lucid and engaging prose makes reading it a pleasure. A vibrant voice, an original recovery, a dynamic rethinking of the tradition.” —Laurie Langbauer, author of Novels of Everyday Life: The Series in English Fiction, 1850–1930 The moral tale was foremost among the new genres of children’s literature that emerged in Britain during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Written expressly to impart moral lessons to their young readers, such tales had a profou...

The Cambridge Companion to ‘Emma'
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 247

The Cambridge Companion to ‘Emma'

This essay collection by leading scholars provides a comprehensive guide to Jane Austen's Emma, one of the greatest English novels.

Material Transgressions
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 360

Material Transgressions

Material Transgressions reveals how Romantic-era authors think outside of historical and theoretical ideologies that reiterate notions of sexed bodies, embodied subjectivities, isolated things, or stable texts. The essays gathered here examine how Romantic writers rethink materiality, especially the subject-object relationship, in order to challenge the tenets of Enlightenment and the culture of sensibility that privileged the hegemony of the speaking and feeling lyric subject and to undo supposedly invariable matter, and representations of it, that limited their writing, agency, knowledge, and even being. In this volume, the idea of transgression serves as a flexible and capacious discursiv...

Changing Hands
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 341

Changing Hands

A new imagining of human hands as physical objects and literal representations in Victorian fiction

The Afterlives of Eighteenth-Century Fiction
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 315

The Afterlives of Eighteenth-Century Fiction

This collection of essays offers insights into the ways in which eighteenth-century novels have been adapted and appropriated by later writers. It will be of interest to students of the rise of the novel, interdisciplinary approaches to literature, and the developing field of adaptation studies.

The Cambridge Companion to Women's Writing in the Romantic Period
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 275

The Cambridge Companion to Women's Writing in the Romantic Period

A wide-ranging and accessible account of the pioneering professional women writers who flourished during the Romantic period.